- Mar 3, 2017
- 1,777
- 6,791
- 136
No, just vanilla Zen5.We gonna have Zen5X3D on shelves in March 2024?
So true, Turin and especially -Dense gonna be $$$.No. Desktop doesn't matter. Shelves don't matter.
No. Desktop doesn't matter. Shelves don't matter.
Revenue isn't profit.Intel made more revenue on desktop last quarter than any segment AMD has...
And even if Zen 5 is the messiah it won't change that by targeting desktop.Intel made more revenue on desktop last quarter than any segment AMD has...
Revenue isn't profit.
Profit is what matters.
Lol ... somehow he managed to throw three different types of VR together and put it in one Zen package![]()
That's with some pretty aggressive cost-cutting.They did have a billion in Operating Income in Client (they don't break that down by Desktop/Notebook).
Yea.H2 2024?
No, just vanilla Zen5.
X3D gonna be later since very weak comp environment.
Dang, my company would miss the upgrade cycle by 6 months then. No matter, Genoa it is. Would be a sweet upgrade over these first gen Xeon Scalable processors that we've had for years now.Yea.
If only ARL wasn't so memey.
Yea.Dang, my company would miss the upgrade cycle by 6 months then
How many you need to replace? Get just one to show the bosses how great your technical acumen is so they would be willing to wait and put down $$$ to get Turin to replace everything.No matter, Genoa it is.
Remind me again, are the Turin vanilla CCDs on TSMC N4P? Just the Turin-Cloud CCDs are N3E? If so, and if there's not much perf/W gains for the N4P vanilla variant, then perhaps I'm not missing out on much since server processors are going to be power limited anyways.Yea.
I would generally wait for Turin since it's a lot better as general-purpose CPU stick of doom, but that assumes you can defer the procurement.
We're a small engineering firm in the grand scheme of things. Not Mom and Pop small, but definitely far from an international design conglomerate. I think our budget is at least a hundred thousand but definitely less than a million dollars, so you're looking at a dozen or two blades. I'm just an engineer in the company and am not part of the IT Department who makes the final decision, but FWIW I am the chair of an internal committee that weighs in on our computational needs.How many you need to replace? Get just one to show the bosses how great your technical acumen is so they would be willing to wait and put down $$$ to get Turin to replace everything.
Yes.Remind me again, are the Turin vanilla CCDs on TSMC N4P?
They're Dense CCD, also used for edge part aka Sorano.Just the Turin-Cloud CCDs are N3E?
Nodes aren't the only way to get ppw.If so, and if there's not much perf/W gains for the N4P vanilla variant
Doubt you'll be buying 96/128c SKUs and in mainstream-ish SP5 parts Turin is king due to gigantic per-core perf uplifts.then perhaps I'm not missing out on much since server processors are going to be power limited anyways.
That's a good number of blades. Tell them the more you wait, the sweeter the hardwareso you're looking at a dozen or two blades. I'm just an engineer in the company and am not part of the IT Department who makes the final decision, but FWIW I am the chair of an internal committee that weighs in on our computational needs.
That does sound tempting, especially since the key workload we use these servers for is 100% single threaded with emphasis on matrix math but non-AVX, but we run multiple parallel processes. Naturally, my preferred processor at the moment are the Genoa F SKUs that are frequency optimized. Turin in the 48 core range sounds like it would be killer.Doubt you'll be buying 96/128c SKUs and in mainstream-ish SP5 parts Turin is king due to gigantic per-core perf uplifts.
Yea defer the procurement as hard as you can.Turin in the 48 core range sounds like it would be killer.
Shouldn't a GPU be a better fit for such workloads?That does sound tempting, especially since the key workload we use these servers for is 100% single threaded with emphasis on matrix math
Are you running civil/mechanical engineering software?That does sound tempting, especially since the key workload we use these servers for is 100% single threaded with emphasis on matrix math but non-AVX, but we run multiple parallel processes. Naturally, my preferred processor at the moment are the Genoa F SKUs that are frequency optimized. Turin in the 48 core range sounds like it would be killer.
FFFFFF. I'll do what I can to defer.Yea defer the procurement as hard as you can.
lol.
Yeah, you would think, but the software was written in the 90s and is archaic by today's standard. The only reason why we use it is because the analysis engine is robust and it's considered "tried and true".Shouldn't a GPU be a better fit for such workloads?
![]()
Using Performance Libraries
Programming oneAPI projects to maximize hardware abilities.www.intel.com
Look at the crazy low completion times on the GPU:
View attachment 84263
Yes, it's building nonlinear time-history analysis. Earthquake simulations.Are you running civil/mechanical engineering software?
Long term, your company should really be looking at rewriting the software. That's insanely inefficient to depend on bruteforce computing power.Yeah, you would think, but the software was written in the 90s and is archaic by today's standard. The only reason why we use it is because the analysis engine is robust and it's considered "tried and true".
Tech debts are hard to get rid of.Long term, your company should really be looking at rewriting the software. That's insanely inefficient to depend on bruteforce computing power.
FFFFFF. I'll do what I can to defer.
Yeah, you would think, but the software was written in the 90s and is archaic by today's standard. The only reason why we use it is because the analysis engine is robust and it's considered "tried and true".
Yes, it's building nonlinear time-history analysis. Earthquake simulations.