- Mar 3, 2017
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Is this the official Jim Keller supervised design? Not from IDC?which brings us to LNC...
Did Keller actually get anything done at Intel ? I thought Keller supposedly left because Intel was not really listening to him... but that could be wrong.Is this the official Jim Keller supervised design? Not from IDC?
no.Is this the official Jim Keller supervised design?
All Intel big cores are IDC (which is the issue).Not from IDC?
He did, butDid Keller actually get anything done at Intel ? I thought Keller supposedly left because Intel was not really listening to him... but that could be wrong.
What year is the first non-IDC big core coming?All Intel big cores are IDC (which is the issue).
never?What year is the first non-IDC big core coming?
As I remember, Keller was the one advocating for modular design where each module is developed in separate process. He mentioned that in couple of interviews. So I would assume, meteor lake is Keller's concept.Did Keller actually get anything done at Intel ? I thought Keller supposedly left because Intel was not really listening to him... but that could be wrong.
Presenting a narrative solution is the starting point, but you have to do the numbers vs crafting a story. A lot of the perpetual motion designs are so created. Fantasy narrative vs real world numbers.You mean memory bandwidth per core? That was already discussed in previous posts. In short, I don’t think it’ll be a problem for most MT workloads.
Ok, send money naow! :-DIf you want more than 16c go with threadripper.
Do you really think 2 channels can properly feed more than 16 cores? We see large uplifts with the 64 core TR going from 4 channel to 8 channel so we know 32c would be limited on just 2.
Not true and I am not sure why you wrote single core performance, you wanted to say multi core performance, right?Also if the power target is 230W, 32 Zen4 cores can run comfortably within that limit. Even at 125W, 32 core Zen4 is possible without loosing much of single core performance.
If those were atoms, yeah.For 24C at least, definitely
Stretching it is acceptable trade-off for say half the price compared to TR :-DIf those were atoms, yeah.
Z5c is very mean.
It's designed to cope with membw not growing on the trees but you're still gonna be stretching it in client.
Ehhh, kinda.Stretching it is acceptable trade-off for say half the price compared to TR
Same point I was trying to make, a hypothetical 32Core Zen4 core processor will have near double the performance of 16Core 230W Zen4 processor. 125W maybe a stretch for 32 core Zen4, but could be possible for Zen 5. Or at least with 16 Z5+16 Z5c.Even with 230W you will lose ~10-13% of nT performance with a 32C Zen4 CPU. Limit It to 125W and you will lose a lot more.
In case anybody else wants to read up on that article without wanting to make the effort of searching for it:You need faster cores, not more of them.
Let's just quote an eons old article.
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Which is kinda funny since even without any inside knowledge one can easily deduce following points:There's a mismatch between expectations and what it actually is in general.
People expect another Zen3 and not the biggest-most-fundamental-change-since-Zen1.
I'm positively surprised nobody checked for some silly GB6 wannabe "MT" scores to prove just that.Show me an iPad that has higher MT performance than 3950X.
This isn't even about R&D money but people being allowed to go ham on area budgets since Dense will server cont-sensitive markets anyway.Which is kinda funny since even without any inside knowledge one can easily deduce following points:
- Zen cores are AMD's single most important IP. Everything else are building blocks to serve it.
- So once AMD has the resources significant ones will be put into Zen core R&D.
- Zen 1 and 3 were ground up core designs, both started when AMD was still fighting against economic adversities like bankruptcy. The process for the next ground up core design, Zen 5, should be free of such worries from the very beginning.
- So with Zen 5, anything else than significantly bigger improvements than every single previous Zen gen would be unexpected and a grande waste of R&D resources.
Mmm I was still a bit let down but prices of their 'cost sensitively platform aka Sienna.This isn't even about R&D money but people being allowed to go ham on area budgets since Dense will server cont-sensitive markets anyway.
Siena is more edge and the pricing for boxes if fine.Mmm I was still a bit let down but prices of their 'cost sensitively platform aka Sienna.
The cheaper-cheaper 4ch platform is for Venice so you'll have to wait.Not cost sensitive at all to me but maybe that's just (cheap) me.
Well it wouldn't be in the spirit of the workloads Fjodor was talking about, would it.I'm positively surprised nobody checked for some silly GB6 wannabe "MT" scores to prove just that.
How about this for a narrative: intel has been shipping ddr4/ddr5 supported desktop chips for years now and there has never been a huge difference in MT workloads.Presenting a narrative solution is the starting point, but you have to do the numbers vs crafting a story. A lot of the perpetual motion designs are so created. Fantasy narrative vs real world numbers.
It's a 24C CPU with about as much MT performance as a 16C Zen 4 CPU. Why would it need more bandwidth for about equal performance? And there is a difference impacting some workloads more than others, already at that performance level.How about this for a narrative: intel has been shipping ddr4/ddr5 supported desktop chips for years now and there has never been a huge difference in MT workloads.
If a 24c CPU doesn't care about having literally twice the bandwidth doing things like blender and premier, I don't see any reason a 32c CPU would take issue especially with DDR5.
They are already GPU accelerated. (Hence they don't contribute to a CPU discussion in the first place.)blender and premier
A core is a core is a core? It might be better to think in total IPC and how much cache can mitigate trips to main memory for various workloads. We have to remember that per core IPC is also increasing rapidly. Additional cores will compound the bandwidth issue. Actual data has to be analysed for a quality answer.How about this for a narrative: intel has been shipping ddr4/ddr5 supported desktop chips for years now and there has never been a huge difference in MT workloads.
If a 24c CPU doesn't care about having literally twice the bandwidth doing things like blender and premier, I don't see any reason a 32c CPU would take issue especially with DDR5.