I do. For every moronic loon that comes in here, making retarded predictions of Zen having Skylake or higher IPC, there should be someone else laughing at and making fun of them, as Nosta was doing here.
What loons, and what "retarded" predictions? Nosta isn't making fun of anybody, he's running interference to get potential buyers off Zen 'cause he has a
vendetta against the guy who hired Keller and was apparently instrumental in EoLing the Construction line of cores. Nosta is also publicly hinting that AMD is infringing on Apple patents by releasing Zen.
The only estimation of Zen's performance to which I've paid any attention have been:
1). Looncraz's own exhaustive examination of instruction latency (admittedly, I don't grok all of it but he's done his homework)
2). AMD's claims of 40% increased IPC over XV
3). The Stilt's fixed clockspeed benchmark results in fp workloads
Now you either believe AMD's claims or you don't. I'm cautiously optimistic. Nobody seems to understand how good is AMD's current design (XV) given that it features low clockspeeds, only comes in 2M configurations, and is hobbled by throttling/poor treatment from most/all OEMs. A 4m/8t XV, right now, would kick some serious butt at in 8-thread scenarios, assuming it could reach even Kaveri-like clockspeeds, though again, it's not clear what socket would do it justice, nor is it clear what process AMD would have used to release such a chip. It's also unclear what AMD would have done to cope with the L3 size/speed problems that bedeviled Piledriver and Bulldozer. L3-less XV would be about useless for MP scenarios, so you'd have a server-class chip restricted to 1P servers, workstations, and desktop duty. Not good.
Things could easily go wrong with Zen, such as bugs from rushing certain aspects of the design, or yield problems from the process leading to lots of flaws/low clockspeeds, or poor voltage scaling past some critical clockspeed (3.4-4.0 GHz) even with good yields, or . . . whatever. It's too early to tell. Nobody knows what it's GOING to be, but for you or anyone else to come in here, read what people are saying, and then point fingers at people and call them names even after they have openly admitted that things might not be all rosy for Zen is poor form.
Yea, kind of ironic that those making the biggest criticisms of other's "simulations", satirical or not, are the first to promote/accept the AMD simulation that showed 40% ipc gain.
What simulation? Nobody has released any simulations. And who is promoting or accepting anything? We have people looking at 40% over XV and saying "yeah, that's Sandy Bridge level right there", like they don't even know (or care) how fast XV really is, even in fp code which is classically the weakness of Construction cores. If there's anything that makes zero sense, it's people who are just being downers 'cuz Bulldozer was overhyped.
All we have, beyond some design hints, is an assurance from AMD of a 40% IPC gain. We have some XV numbers, so do the math. Either AMD is right or not. A lot is riding on that prediction, though in AMD's defense, they under-estimated Zen's IPC increase over SR. If AMD is over-estimating the IPC gain, or if they're casually ignoring clockspeed/voltage scaling problems, then Zen may flop.
Seems like the Zen hype train is suddenly grinding to a screeching halt...sad, huh? I wonder if NostaSeronx's predictions of 22 and 14nm Harvester/Crane cores are true...and if they'll end up being FASTER than Zen.
Again, please don't take Nosta seriously. How many times has he just been flat-out wrong? Has anyone even tracked the accuracy of his statements?
Mock AMD for their Bulldozer fiasco all you wish, but if anyone has a worse track record than AMD, it's Nosta. It was sort of cute/annoying when he was babbling on about AMD's latest design as if it would somehow threaten Intel, but now he's turning on the company over which he obsesses and feeding negative public sentiment that has no basis in fact.
Ever since Orochi (BD ver1) I've been saying that AMD's problem is caching and interconnects. The cores are powerful but always hungry. Remember Hammer, where HT was a squidload faster than Intel's FSB, and what a difference that made? AMD needs to do that again. It's not going to, and its caches are probably gonna suck just as much as ever, but that's what it needs.
Zen has completely redesigned caches. They're going from exclusive to inclusive. It's a major part of what differentiates Zen from XV and its predecessors. I agree that AMD's cache performance has been poor since forever, and ever since Intel went with IMCs on Nehalem, AMD's IMC performance has lagged behind as well. If Stilt is right and Bristol Ridge's IMC tops out at DDR4-2400, then that is an issue that seriously needs correction as well. Summit Ridge and Raven Ridge need to do better than that. DDR4 launched some time ago with DDR4-3200 modules on the open market, and DDR4-4000+ is out there in the wild right now. Not to speak of the fact that most of AMD's IMCs underperform running the same memory standard as Intel memory controllers.
I don't think HT is a problem right now, though. Maybe for MP configurations it is . . .