- Mar 3, 2017
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I mean this with no malice, but you're always going to be disappointed because you're not a market that makes any sense. From what I can see, you want high core counts and high vcache. But you won't pay for the products that have those, because you don't make enough money from them to justify the price, so what you really want is products designed for people that make money with them and you want them sold as if they don't make money for people.12 cores on a single CCD isn't enough for me so the next best thing seems to be dual V-cache CCD. Now if I could get 32 Zen 5c/6c cores on a single CCD with the primary CCD having 12 Zen 5 or Zen 6 cores, then yes, I'm in heaven.
Since, I hope you are aware, it's pointless for gaming, then why not rent it from azure, test whatever workloads you are interested in and no longer wonder if it is worth it?And shutting me up about that is really easy. Give me a working 9184X CPU/mobo combo for $1500 or less
Hoping for progress in the next 56 years (assuming I live to be 100)Cycle of disappointment and longing awaits!
As are dual vache CPUs that he longs for. You don't want cross CCD talk anyway. So you want to pin the game to one CCD. Appreciate this is not the topic I've quoted, just in the spirit of asking for products that make no sense.Since, I hope you are aware, it's pointless for gaming, then why not rent it from azure, test whatever workloads you are interested in and no longer wonder if it is worth it?
If you hope companies to sell product to you for a dime they can sell to companies for dollars then I don't think it matters how long you live..Hoping for progress in the next 56 years (assuming I live to be 100)![]()
I would want to test everything which includes games too. No such VMs available in Azure, not with a consumer GPU and certainly not 9184X that I could have all to myself.Since, I hope you are aware, it's pointless for gaming, then why not rent it from azure, test whatever workloads you are interested in and no longer wonder if it is worth it?
I see you're also a connoisseur of pointless things
A dual vache CCD still has the inherent cross CCD penalty. It doesn't really help.
Instead what you should be asking for, is an overall larger CCD with vcache on it that doesn't have cross CCD penalty. Maybe with 12 cores.. that's actually what you want. Lucky, that. It's the quickest way to a performance improvement. It's the thing you should be asking for when you ask for the wrong thing
Yeah, all those EPYC processors that have all VCache CCDs are completely pointless! Just constantly suffering from that cross CCD penalty in every case and with horrible benchmarks to show for it...
Oh wait, they don't! In fact, they were, in some situations, the highest performing parts available last generation. Why? Because there ARE SOME applications where it helps a whole lot. People that use those applications are VERY cognizant of that. A dual VCache Ryzenx3d can certainly have some specific use cases where they shine.
It's just that AMD would much rather for those users to pay over $2000 for such a part instead of the much lower cost Ryzen platform.
Really not a price issue at all.bruh just how expensive can Vcache be... 20 bucks a hit? should be thrown into every chip AMD makes lol
Sometimes it does not help, other times it is huge ! Thats why there are different things offered. For one, the chip can't run as fast with the cache.bruh just how expensive can Vcache be... 20 bucks a hit? should be thrown into every chip AMD makes lol
Where did I say that what it did great is gaming? There are other things in life besides gaming! They already have a product segment where this would go, the Epyc 4000 series. And, with their game center solution, with one CCD disabled, it should be no worse than a 9950x3d in gaming anyway!Yes they do some thing well. Gaming isn't one of them. Also, as bolded by me, is there anything wrong with that? Assume tey do gaming well. Are you willing to spend $2000+ like others are for a 5090?
bruh just how expensive can Vcache be... 20 bucks a hit? should be thrown into every chip AMD makes lol
Ryzen is the consumer line, people use it for gaming and other compute tasks. The point is they are all consumer tasks. Really you get the single core CCD with vcache of you game, and if you want it for dual use as a workhorse you get the single CCD vcache.Yeah, all those EPYC processors that have all VCache CCDs are completely pointless! Just constantly suffering from that cross CCD penalty in every case and with horrible benchmarks to show for it...
Oh wait, they don't! In fact, they were, in some situations, the highest performing parts available last generation. Why? Because there ARE SOME applications where it helps a whole lot. People that use those applications are VERY cognizant of that. A dual VCache Ryzenx3d can certainly have some specific use cases where they shine.
It's just that AMD would much rather for those users to pay over $2000 for such a part instead of the much lower cost Ryzen platform.
Great! Now they can only make 1/20th of the processors they make today because now they are constrained by packaging supply. Nice planbruh just how expensive can Vcache be... 20 bucks a hit? should be thrown into every chip AMD makes lol
Not true - there is no 3D version of Turin and official message is that they won't do it this gen, so no - you can't get Zen 5 with both chiplets having 3D cache at all, for any money.The product already exists and it's not for consumer.
wait til you see the EPYC and Threadripper prices that come with Vcache.
It’s not like the chip suddenly ceases to function when the second CCD is used.I see you're also a connoisseur of pointless things
A dual vache CCD still has the inherent cross CCD penalty. It doesn't really help.
Instead what you should be asking for, is an overall larger CCD with vcache on it that doesn't have cross CCD penalty. Maybe with 12 cores.. that's actually what you want. Lucky, that. It's the quickest way to a performance improvement. It's the thing you should be asking for when you ask for the wrong thing
As are dual vache CPUs that he longs for. You don't want cross CCD talk anyway. So you want to pin the game to one CCD. Appreciate this is not the topic I've quoted, just in the spirit of asking for products that make no sense.
X3D isn’t just used for gaming. There are workloads outside of gaming that benefit as well.So many people fail to realize this. They think X3D makes games great. 2x 3D must make games better! I'm sure it helps in some cases. Games isn't one of them.
There, you found the whole issue. There is a market segment between Ryzen and Threadripper/EPYC that isn’t being properly addressed. AMD tries to squeeze them up into TR, many choose to drop down into Ryzen instead.Ryzen is the consumer line, people use it for gaming and other compute tasks. The point is they are all consumer tasks. Really you get the single core CCD with vcache of you game, and if you want it for dual use as a workhorse you get the single CCD vcache.
If you really want to use the applications that benefit from vcache and large amounts of cores the last part of your paragraph is the important one. The product already exists and it's not for consumer. To provide it to consumer would mean lopping off lots of commercial income. The clamour for expensive hardware for cheap is, pointless. It's not a segment AMD will provide for you. It would be mad for them to do so...
bruh just how expensive can Vcache be... 20 bucks a hit? should be thrown into every chip AMD makes lol
That's what people claim. But the actual impact on particular games (or other workloads) has never been measured.A dual vache CCD still has the inherent cross CCD penalty. It doesn't really help.
Small core complexes are an enabler of low latency of the L3 caches.Instead what you should be asking for, is an overall larger CCD