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Will take a while for PC units to return there.Not to the level it was in 2020 (overall).
And you even cherry-picked a much cheaper 8core just to It would look better in comparison
I'm fully aware of that basic stuff and agree with it, so no need trying to convince me.He didn't mean It as you think. I will try to explain It to you.
How can a single core offer for example 30% higher performance but the rest of the cores stay the same compared to Zen4?
The only possibility is If the turboboost for a single core increased from 5.7GHz to 7.4GHz.
This is already very unrealistic, because that clock is just too high.
The other illogical thing would be to expect one core to clock that high, but using two or more would result in the same clocks as Zen4 has.
BTW @adroc_thurston already said on this forum that Zen5 won't increase clocks compared to Zen4.
Then how can a single core become faster? Only by higher IPC.
If IPC of one core increased by 30% then what do you think will happen to the rest of the cores and the performance of the whole chip?
Of course the MT performance will increase by about the same amount unless power consumption will hit the power limit resulting in lower performance because of lowered clockspeed.
Core count is also important for MT, but It's limited by the number of threads used by soft.
I will give you a simple example, there are 2 CPUs.
CPU A: 16C32T 5.6GHz turbo, 5GHz all-core clock, + 50% IPC compared to Zen4
CPU B: 24C48T 5.6GHz turbo, 5GHz all-core clock, the same IPC as Zen4
What is the performance?
At 48 Threads they would perform the same, because CPU A can execute only 32 threads at once, but at fewer threads CPU A will be faster and at 1-16T the difference will be 50% faster.
P.S. I don't know If what @adroc_thurston said is true or not. We will see after Zen5 is out.
That's been kinda confirmed via this thread here, I believe.hasan's rag has published some semi confirmation that z5 uses the same ciod by leakers.
I wrote this:Yes, because you started by intentionally cherry-picking the most expensive Zen1 8 core CPU (1800X) to make it look worse in comparison, so I thought I'd return the favour in the opposite direction.![]()
They are the fastest desktop offering from each generation.8C16T Ryzen 7 1800X: $499 (100%)
16C32T Ryzen 9 3850X: $749 (150%)
16C32T Ryzen 9 5950X: $799 (160%)
16C32T Ryzen 9 7950X(X3D): $699 (140%)
You "forgot" to mention that it was possible to get 8 cores for $329 with the AMD Zen1 1700 in 2017. No need to buy the most expensive Zen1 variant being 1800X at $499 which also had 8 cores.I wrote this:
They are the fastest desktop offering from each generation.
Where is some intentional cherry-picking in that?
yeah by adrock thurston, though people seemed to be questioning his posts latelyThat's been kinda confirmed via this thread here, I believe.
In that comparison, I was giving proof that your expectation about Zen5 having 50% more cores for the same $699 price is unrealistic. That's why I provided top desktop parts from each generation, because this 24C Zen5 would also be the top product of that generation.You "forgot" to mention that it was possible to get 8 cores for $329 with the AMD Zen1 1700. No need to buy the most expensive Zen1 variant being 1800X at $499 which also had 8 cores.
Read my full post, not only part of it.In that comparison, I was giving proof that your expectation about Zen5 having 50% more cores for the same $699 price is unrealistic. That's why I provided top desktop parts from each generation, because this Zen5 would also be the top product of that generation.
So please enlighten me why I should have mentioned this cheaper R7 1700? There was clearly no reason to mention It in my comparison.
Bad news is, I've tried using an RPL laptop with only two P-cores in Windows 11. Performance is pretty snappy though not sure if the user suffers when there are lots of background apps open with dozens of tabs. But based on 5 minutes of launching apps on such a laptop in a store, I would buy it in a heartbeat, especially if I didn't know it had only two P-cores.Only mobile can be a bit of an issue since Intel is very keen about flooding the market with cheapo RPL 282 parts.
Here is the whole post.Read my full post, not only part of it.
The bold one wasn't quoted at that time, so I added It this time.![]()
AMD revenue drops 9% as PC chip sales decline sharply
AMD's report comes as the PC industry is in a deep slump, with shipments dropping 30% in the first quarter, according to IDC.www.cnbc.com
"AMD revenue drops 9% as PC chip sales decline sharply"
"AMD’s report comes as the PC industry is in a deep slump, with shipments dropping 30% in the first quarter, according to IDC."
Huh? 7950X was $699 at launch. As I said, a potential 24C Zen5 (whether there will be such a CPU or not) should be priced the same, i.e. $699 and not $999. And 16C Zen5 lower.
AMD had stayed on max 16C for standard desktop for far too long. They're going to be run over by Intel soon in MT perf if they do not increase core count. They need to bump core count just like they did with Zen (8C) and Zen2 (16C). AMD has stagnated since then.
Of course Zen5 have better perf than Zen4. Why release it otherwise?
But people are not prepared to pay the amount of money for it that you think. They'll buy Zen3/Zen4 or Intel instead. Also, Zen5 will soon after release be competing with Intel Arrow Lake (8P + 32E), which potentially will stomp on Zen5 in MT workloads.
Here is the whole post.
The bold one wasn't quoted at that time, so I added It this time.
I reread It and? What do you want to say exactly?
That AMD should add more cores in Zen5 for the same price because a hypothetical Arrow Lake (8P + 32E) will be faster when using 32 vs 48 threads? Or that they are using 16 cores for too long?
edit:
I don't see a big problem with Zen5 staying at only 16 cores, not that many people need more than that. If someone needs more, then just buy a server(workstation) one from AMD or Intel, which has more cores.
The problem for me would be If desktop Zen5 was overpriced compared to what It brings to the table. For example $999 would be very expensive for a 16C32T even If performance would be 50% better.
Yeah, my work laptop is 2+8 RPL and it's surprisingly snappy.Bad news is, I've tried using an RPL laptop with only two P-cores in Windows 11. Performance is pretty snappy though not sure if the user suffers when there are lots of background apps open with dozens of tabs. But based on 5 minutes of launching apps on such a laptop in a store, I would buy it in a heartbeat, especially if I didn't know it had only two P-cores.
I don't see a big problem with Zen5 staying at only 16 cores, not that many people need more than that. If someone needs more, then just buy a server(workstation) one from AMD or Intel, which has more cores.
Agreed. I wonder how many users will be prepared to pay $999 for a speculated 16C/32T 8950X with ~30% higher IPC than 7950X, if they can get 7950X for about half the price.The problem for me would be If desktop Zen5 was overpriced compared to what It brings to the table. For example $999 would be very expensive for a 16C32T even If performance would be 50% better.
Yeah they're goodenough parts and Intel sells 'em for cheap.Bad news is, I've tried using an RPL laptop with only two P-cores in Windows 11. Performance is pretty snappy though not sure if the user suffers when there are lots of background apps open with dozens of tabs. But based on 5 minutes of launching apps on such a laptop in a store, I would buy it in a heartbeat, especially if I didn't know it had only two P-cores.
It is. Unless you go into workloads like virtualization. Then you pretty quickly regret it...Yeah, my work laptop is 2+8 RPL and it's surprisingly snappy.
Well, no one really runs VMs on 282 ultrabooks.It is. Unless you go into workloads like virtualization. Then you pretty quickly regret it...
How is that bad news? It's good news overall since this seems to be where the industry is heading (both Intel & eventually AMD) so having a relatively seamless experience is bullish for future processors and Windows' OS.Bad news is, I've tried using an RPL laptop with only two P-cores in Windows 11. Performance is pretty snappy though not sure if the user suffers when there are lots of background apps open with dozens of tabs. But based on 5 minutes of launching apps on such a laptop in a store, I would buy it in a heartbeat, especially if I didn't know it had only two P-cores.
We went from 4 muscle cores to 2 muscle cores plus 8 pathetic cores. It's a regression. Games would suffer the most on just two real cores.How is that bad news?
Not a gaming chip, whateverGames would suffer the most on just two real cores.
Casual gaming would be worse off with that chip. Admit it. It's not good. 4P+4E or 4P+6E would be more balanced and useful for everyone. Intel got away with selling an inferior/smaller chip for the same price.Not a gaming chip, whatever
You don't game on 282.Casual gaming would be worse off with that chip.
Guess what exactly you're getting in LNL-M!4P+4E
I have installed a few 2P+8E core laptops (i5-1235U). Various SW installation feeling was anything but snappy compared to Ryzen 6/8 core offerings). i7-13700H laptop was snappy, but it is of course another category (6P+8E cores).Bad news is, I've tried using an RPL laptop with only two P-cores in Windows 11. Performance is pretty snappy though not sure if the user suffers when there are lots of background apps open with dozens of tabs. But based on 5 minutes of launching apps on such a laptop in a store, I would buy it in a heartbeat, especially if I didn't know it had only two P-cores.