- Mar 3, 2017
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You're talking about what Geppetto from amd said, aka the bald twat who later resigned. I remember such a statement but it was about getting out of 1:1 ram sync for the fclk and if. 8000 takes it out of it as I understand. the benefits are minimal compared to an intel ks processor capable of hitting high 7000 or low 8000 oc compared to 6400.
ditto on the latency. all the best kits right now have a 10ns latency. The best ddr4 was around 9ns or 8.5 ns latency. still nice to see ddr5 prices so cheap compared to this time last year.
I have bad news for you since Dense CCD is only weeks after normal CCD and it's on N3e.
Please stop talking about things you have no idea of.
Yea, not news.That would mean it would be one of the first products using N3E
Why?Which seems tough to believe.
Yea, not news.
Why?
AMD is the sole user of SoIC-X for many years to come.
lol
Everyone wants to get early dibs on Turin-D (it's the best!).It's been a really long time since anyone other than Apple has been an early adopter of a TSMC node.
Apple is of no relevance anymore ever since they cut current year SoCs from mainstream iPhones, thus cutting wafer volume at ramp by a lot.
N5p isn't terrible value but A16 is 14 pro/max only.That's because N3B is a terrible value compared to N4P.
So it's intentional segmentation strategy due to rising SoC costs.
Zen 4, especially server (Genoa) is so far ahead of Intel that 2-3 of their nodes will just get them close, and AMD is not standing still. I would leave your flag waving alone until Intel actually takes a lead in ANYTHING.Add to the future problems AMD faces with Intel's 5 nodes in 4 years thing. The Raptor Lake refresh arrives in October. This will further distance Intel from Zen 4. By the time Arrow Lake is released in 2024. The process advantage AMD had or will have based on efficiency, will be lost. The Arrow Lake CPU's will have an equal number (P cores equal to or greater than AMD cores) of P cores and a ton of E cores. 20A is a 5nm process. Intel's silicon is more dense than TSMC. They are more robust. I do not care about the propaganda of Intel. Saying that 5nm Intel is equal to 2 or 3nm TSMC silicon. The point is that 5nm Intel silicon will have the power efficiency that Intel lacked in current and previous generations vs. AMD. I still think AMD will have a power efficiency advantage with Zen 5.
The Intel roadmap indicates they think Intel will have full leadership when the Lunar Lake 18A process comes to market. That means Intel CPU's will be the class leader in every aspect. Core count, power efficiency, frequency (mhz) and IPC.
Intel claims they will but haven't shown any result through hvm they can accomplish this. this is also the same intel that said they'd have 10nm available soon several years before they began the lead process into achieving that goal, which as you know they failed miserably at.Add to the future problems AMD faces with Intel's 5 nodes in 4 years thing.
that's fantastic, the zen 4 processors won't burn up as a result of how hot the refresh is. latest reports show an avg 20% gain in some scenarios with a 13% or more increase in power usage.The Raptor Lake refresh arrives in October. This will further distance Intel from Zen 4.
Almost 2+ quarters after amd is allegedly releasing their zen 5 processors?By the time Arrow Lake is released in 2024. The process advantage AMD had or will have based on efficiency, will be lost.
Can you provide a source that can confidently state that arl will have 16 p-cores? I can't find such a source. All sources lead back to the initial rumors long ago of a 8+32 solution or 8+24 solution. Intel as it stands now needs 24 cores at the top to match or slightly edge out a 16 core ryzen processor, including at least 50-75 watts extra power. The refresh is nothing more than a 200 mhz bump and increased power usage.The Arrow Lake CPU's will have an equal number (P cores equal to or greater than AMD cores) of P cores and a ton of E cores.
that's all great but if the design sucks the design sucks. Intel will go on a tiled approach comprised of various nodes. the compute tiles will be at that. there is no gaurantee their new design process will work out well compared to a more traditional design. So far their hybrid system hasn't put a large or even minor gap between it and zen. the overall complexity of intel's approach and costs scope creep is going to be higher than it is for amd.20A is a 5nm process. Intel's silicon is more dense than TSMC. They are more robust. I do not care about the propaganda of Intel.
and you come down to earth here with sensibility between your ears.The point is that 5nm Intel silicon will have the power efficiency that Intel lacked in current and previous generations vs. AMD. I still think AMD will have a power efficiency advantage with Zen 5.
Intel saying and thinking about things while not having accomplished 1/8th of their approach and future plans is fruitless to repeat online by you or anyone for that matter.The Intel roadmap indicates they think Intel will have full leadership when the Lunar Lake 18A process comes to market. That means Intel CPU's will be the class leader in every aspect. Core count, power efficiency, frequency (mhz) and IPC.
This a much nicer way of saying what I originally planned on telling him but removed last minute out of courtesy. It involves speech and one's posterior. As you point out they'll continuously play the catch up game. Soon we'll be blaming them for global warming and rising water levels and not vehicles.Zen 4, especially server (Genoa) is so far ahead of Intel that 2-3 of their nodes will just get them close, and AMD is not standing still. I would leave your flag waving alone until Intel actually takes a lead in ANYTHING.
And this is a Zen 5 thread, not an Intel thread.
Is it a race now between Sierra Forrest and Turin Dense?I have bad news for you since Dense CCD is only weeks after normal CCD and it's on N3e.
Please stop talking about things you have no idea of.
I was wondering about that. One rumor was that AMD bought out all of the capacity for years to come.Yea, not news.
Why?
AMD is the sole user of SoIC-X for many years to come.
lol
Not really, SRF is a joke in everything not upfront costs (Intel sells it for pennies).Is it a race now between Sierra Forrest and Turin Dense?
Hyperscalers think as much yes.It will be hopeless against Turin Dense...
Yea.One rumor was that AMD bought out all of the capacity for years to come.
No, 3D is hard and no one else is really willing.Or is there any kind of exclusivity agreement in addition to that?
Partnership is right as AMD must be doing a lot of the R&D for this. It's as much theirs as TSMC.AMD also has incentives to keep this partnership going it trying to bring to high volume manufacturing higher levels of stacking
And for TSMC, the benefits start to multiply (rather than just add) with higher levels of stacking.Partnership is right as AMD must be doing a lot of the R&D for this. It's as much theirs as TSMC.
The main challenge with HB is HB itself being a rather slow process for CoW purposes.We just don't know how challenging it is...
That part makes sense, that CoW is an elaborate process, one at the time.The main challenge with HB is HB itself being a rather slow process for CoW purposes.
Which is why SoIC-P is a thing for mainstream applications.
SoIC-P (bumped) vs. SoIC-X (bumpless) is lame.The main challenge with HB is HB itself being a rather slow process for CoW purposes.
Which is why SoIC-P is a thing for mainstream applications.
WoW is of very limited use.But to get higher levels of stacking, TSMC would use WoW stacking is fast
It's good, poverty segments don't need hybrid bonding and -P shares the process flow with CoWoS-S that way.SoIC-P (bumped) vs. SoIC-X (bumpless) is lame.
Any info on throughput?The main challenge with HB is HB itself being a rather slow process for CoW purposes.
Which is why SoIC-P is a thing for mainstream applications.
I don't think it's public so not sure if I should talk about it here.Any info on throughput?
We can go with the assumption that AMD is using all of it and there is no extra capacity to spare.Any info on throughput?
They won't, you're going straight to Granite Ridge.when AMD introduces 7600x3d.