However, the greater the graphics load, the greater AMD benefits compared to Intel.
No, the greater the graphics load, the more likely the game is to be GPU-limited. Once the GPU becomes the limit, CPU difference ceases to matter. The same thing that lets an A10 catch up to and match an i3, is going to let an i3 catch up to/match an i5/i7.
I do think that is interesting, but until that day comes I think AMD should back off adding so much iGPU (re: It is just too costly for them to use 512sp iGPU relative to what they could do with less iGPU).
Basically, this iGPU size issue appears to me to be one of opportunity cost.
AMD isn't doing it. Intel isn't doing it either. They both want moar GPU on the CPU package. Intel has a big enough R&D budget and operational budget to maintain LGA2011 without iGPUs, and AMD doesn't, so . . . there you have it.
But the Core i3 is still 40.5% faster overall in low quality mode. That is a pretty large gap.
This compared to the Medium quality and Extreme quality where the Core i3 was less than 9% and 4% faster respectively.
Again, you are seeing the benchmark become GPU-limited. Regardless, the gap still closes in low quality mode where the benchmark is CPU-limited. The i3 goes from ~%80 faster to ~%40 faster. That's a huge gain for AMD.
If Zen is indeed 8C on the consumer market that means AMD is again trying to compensate with more cores the weak performance of each individual core, but on the overall landscape of the server market, things get much bleaker.
It's pretty obvious that many people are projecting a move away from Xeon/Opteron "big core" servers and towards even smaller commodity hardware. Microservers and that nonsense. I can see where there are areas where going micro would be good, and where it wouldn't be so good. But in a hardware ecosystem that favors low-power parts and insane thread-parallelism, having a chip like an 8C/16T part with a 95W TDP on a low-power node would have its uses, especially if it shared a socket with a next-gen Seattle product (Skybridge, anyone?) .
Stuff like Moonshot hasn't really taken off yet, and I'm not sure that rolling out what appears to be a rehash of the SPARC Tx strategy may not take off either. Zen is not a guaranteed success.
Assuming that AMD is indeed going with SMT, what's the point of 95W 16 thread chips for servers when Intel is fielding either 36 threads chips or 16 highly clocked threads?
Price, and power consumption. The idea is that if you have enough servers out there (web servers, for example) that show really inconsistent workloads and long periods of core idle time, that you can throw weaker cores in there and break up a monolithic webserver into a bunch of smaller servers and still handle the same workload "adequately" while using overall less power and paying overall less for hardware. Granted, Zen only plays into that by being a potentially cheap, low-power alternative to some 16T Xeon, and it has to bill itself as being "good enough", not "just as good as". It's not clear that Zen would beat a competitive 8C/16T Xeon CPU on overall load and idle power consumption anyway. We'll see.
That's right, there's no point, Zen is DOA by all standards on servers. This is against Intel 22nm line, once Xeon 14nm arrives the comparisons will get much worse.
Well, it is Jim Keller . . . but also, it is AMD. And nobody knows what Samsung's 14nm process is really going to be like, either.
Not sure, but I do know a 35 watt 245mm2 Carrizo will be more expensive than a 101mm2 cat core chip.
Probably, and this is why I expect that you wouldn't see them in the same OEM space as E1s and E2s. If they tape out 1M Carrizo (or just sell some failed parts as 1M parts) and target that low-end 10W TDP instead (or lower), then we're talking a workable solution. AMD can probably move those chips for a price similar to what they were charging for E1s/E2s/E-350s in 2013/early 2014.
With that mentioned, I can't imagine why too many folks would want 18.5" over 21.5"? Isn't 21.5" pretty much the most common commodity panel size for desktop monitors?
We can split hairs here, but does it make a difference? Remember, that Gateway One I linked had an E-350 in it. It had a 20" monitor.
That Gateway One you linked for $347 is refurbished on overstock.com (a discount website) ,
I wanted to link the MSRP from the manufacturer, but they have apparently discontinued the unit and replace it with something more expensive. Its original MSRP was ~$400.
while the A4-5000 you linked for $479.99 is new and on the manufacturer's website (which means it is full price).
Exactly. The A4 unit has an MSRP that is $80 higher than the E-350, and $80 higher than the HP E1-2500 unit. It's ~$130 higher than where both the E-350 and E1-2500 units are selling today.
However, the same A4-5000 AIO in new condition (with 19.5" 1600 x 900 chassis) is $399.99 at Newegg
That's Newegg. If you waltz into a brick n' mortar store (which is where a lot of units like this move as impulse/convenience buys), you are probably paying MSRP.
Here are some examples of what you might find in a brick n' mortar store:
Best Buy
(interesting outlier with the A6 for $499)
Staples
Wow, a rare Kabini quad. At 1.3 ghz. For $550. Yay!
Office Depot
Okay, here we have a 1.3 ghz Kabini quad for $420 (after heavy discounting). Not as bad. $20 more than where the 18-5110 was about 8 months ago (we see the 18-5110 here, for $360).
And, finally . . .
Wal-mart
Ignoring the out-of-stock and refurb, we have another E1-2500 (bleh) and another E2-3800, this time at a regular price of $480.
So, what can we learn from all this? Mostly, desktop AiO manufacturers are some cheap bastards, with the possible exception of Lenovo with that rare $500 A6. But that's still outside of the $400 comfort zone where the E1-2500, E-350, and some other junk cat chips were selling (MSRP, not sale, not refurb) in early 2014.
Sadly the E2-3800, which should have been able to bump off chips like those at the same price point, is selling sometimes for $100 more. The A4s aren't that much more expensive. Hell that A4 I linked on the Gateway product page is a steal compared to some of those E2 units.
As much as I'd like to see some capable 25-35W AMD parts selling in the AiO space in the range of $400 MSRP, the current product selection gives me little hope that we'll see it, except maybe for Carrizo-L. I still think AMD
could pull it off with 1M Carrizo, but only with cooperation of OEMs.
This is a market that AMD needs to snap up with Carrizo/Carrizo-L. They are not going to do it with prices like that.