- Mar 3, 2017
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Sarlak IGP with only 16CU would need to have ~3.3GHz game frequency to be in theory on par with 7600S.Best Buy USA currently listed ASUS TUF A16 with 7600S 8GB @ $799 (drop from $1,099), seems like this is the model will be replaced by Sarlak base model.
7600S has only 28CU. 7600M XT or 7700S have 32CU.I never believe in 40CU of RDNA3+; even with 256-bit LPDDR5x-8533, total memory bandwidth is around 272GB/s which is similar to 7600S with 32CU. Remember APU have to share memory bandwidth with CPU and GPU, thus I believe with real dual issue ALU, Sarlak will most likely having 20CU or WGP with 2560 ALU...
Maybe @adroc_thurston can provide some insights?
You have less cores (12 vs 16), less memory(32GB vs 48GB) and although RX 4070 is significantly more powerful It's limited to 8GB Vram.Hmm, the issue is with around $1,500, we have much better choice than large iGPU. I have updated the table to include ROG Strix G17 with Fire Range 12 Zen5 cores and RTX4070 GPU. Based on current pricing, the upcoming G17 with full fat Zen5 cores will offer much better graphics performance at slightly higher price. Would you rather go for RTX4070 or iGPU?
Wdym 16CU?Sarlak IGP with only 16CU would need to have ~3.3GHz game frequency to be in theory on par with 7600S.
What the hell are you on, none of STX-halo dies chops are anywhere near frozenYou have less cores 12 instead of 16, less memory and although RX 4070 is more powerful It's limited to 8GB Vram.
It's from @Tigerick not from me.Wdym 16CU?
No one's gonna chop 60% of STX-halo iGP tile off.
I am commenting what @Tigerick wrote about Ryzen 9 8950HX vs Ryzen 9 8855HX+RTX4070.What the hell are you on, none of STX-halo dies chops are anywhere near frozen
Zen6 still on AM5? That comparison would suggest it wont be.Correct!
Think of Zen5 as Conroe and Zen6 as Nehalem.
For now, yes.Zen6 still on AM5?
High chances you will.Just want to know whether to consider replacing Zen4 with Zen5
No, just a system/SoC design approach.suggesting more cores for consumer ryzen with zen 6 as one example.
with soldered RAM, even in desktop?No, just a system/SoC design approach.
What?with soldered RAM, even in desktop?
Faster speeds, for one. Plus, more memory bus width, especially if they want to bring more than 16 cores to desktop without increasing the number of memory slots on mobos and keeping most of them adhering to micro-ATX form factor. I personally don't want soldered RAM but I can see the point of it if it enables the best performance without needing to tinker with memory overclocking. They could even make the whole SoC with soldered RAM in the form of a large slot module that plugs vertically into the mobo. There are pros (easier assembly) and cons (could kill DIY) to it.Why would you need LPDDR on desktop?
And horrible latency (LPDDR is GDDR levels of it).Faster speeds, for one
Don't need that.Plus, more memory bus width
Don't need that either.especially if they want to bring more than 16 cores to desktop
Is LPDDR5 latency worse than equivalent speed DDR5 DIMM?And horrible latency (LPDDR is GDDR levels of it).
Yea and by a lot.Is LPDDR5 latency worse than equivalent speed DDR5 DIMM?
Thanks.For now, yes.
High chances you will.
AMD can hide that easily with V-cache. Imagine a design where both CPU and GPU (over PCIe 5.0) access system memory through a large 256MB or even 512MB V-cache. Gobs of bandwidth, acceptable latency and enough RAM (if they go with minimum 48GB) to make even 8GB VRAM graphics cards perform well.And horrible latency (LPDDR is GDDR levels of it).
There is just something unappealing about the asymmetric approach of 7950x3d. I think it was also a waste of time for AMD to introduce it, and delay further the 7800x3d.Thanks.
How about 3D cache? Will we see clock downgrade cause by its addition resolved in Zen 5 or 6?
I went vanilla 7950x with Zen4. cause i did not want to wait for 3D chips later down the road, but ultimately did not like how 7950x3D was designed anyway - with inequal CCDs. If nextgen fixed that and introduced 16C chip with both v-cache dies and same clocks as vanilla ones - i would be tempted, even at somewhat higher price.
If Zen6 comes with some hybrid approach and non-equal dies already regardless of v-cache, then i guess this is a moot point.
No.Will we see clock downgrade cause by its addition resolved in Zen 5 or 6?
No.If nextgen fixed that and introduced 16C chip with both v-cache dies and same clocks as vanilla ones
That costs money and not really suitable for mainstream segments like laptop.AMD can hide that easily with V-cache
Oh hell no why would you want to DMA into some cache blob over PCIe.and GPU (over PCIe 5.0) access system memory through a large 256MB or even 512MB V-cache.
Why not?Oh hell no why would you want to DMA into some cache blob over PCIe.
you gotta check PCIe bandwidth and latency to understandWhy not?
Only useful for the people who want it all, a fast processor with lots of cores and that cache, except the regular compute die is still a lower clocker than the reg processor. I think amd will eventually figure out a sweet spot and way for everything.There is just something unappealing about the asymmetric approach of 7950x3d. I think it was also a waste of time for AMD to introduce it, and delay further the 7800x3d.
Looking at the recent sales from Mindfactory, the 7900x3d and 7950x3d are non entities. So it was yet another own goal by AMD marketing.
They sold more 7950x3ds than 13900k per your source, 7900x3d matches the Intel chip in sales but both are still ahead of the vanilla 7950x. For halo chips they seem to have a very solid place in the lineup, that's a lot more than just existing for a marketing goal. And your logic makes the same argument for Intel which I would also completely disagree with, since flagships aren't supposed to be huge sellers in a random month well after launches.Looking at the recent sales from Mindfactory, the 7900x3d and 7950x3d are non entities. So it was yet another own goal by AMD marketing.
Well the customers prefer it much more over the non-cache version. AMD definitely released the halos first to mop up impulse sales but the market seems to always agree that budget is more valuable than sheer cores.There is just something unappealing about the asymmetric approach of 7950x3d.
People need to watch PC jesus trip to amd campus as to why you wont see dual vcache 16 core parts. The actual answer is to put the vcache on the memory controller/ MALL.
MALL doesn't need SoIC-X (MI300 MALL is run-thru a bunch of 2.5D interfaces really).The actual answer is to put the vcache on the memory controller/ MALL
A large one, it's a memory side cache.but there would be small latency hit vs. a cache hit in CCDs own or stacked L3.
Good lord someone missed his comparch course in college.the extra latency would by
Client yes, battery life is nice.I think MALL will be the answer to CPU, both client and server.