Yes, but total FULL cores matter for overall throughput of the chip. SMT helps a single core have more throughput .... and is therefore good (as others stated).As I mentioned, it’s perf/thread AND thread count. Thread count is 48T in both cases though, so that’s leaves perf/thread for comparison.
I agree with your assessment that 48 full cores without SMT are likely to eclipse 24 cores with SMT in highly thread scalable applications.
Agree. What does deserve some thought IMO is PPA as this effects the profitability of the company. It is also important to understand how many cores you can fit in a power envelope as this effects the overall throughput per socket.Threads don't execute anything. They are simply steams of (decoded) instructions. The only valid thing to care about for rendering is total throughput. Any uniform divisor is nearly useless. Perf per core is misleading in heterogenous designs and perf per thread is misleading for SMT designs.
Really? Do you have a link? I haven't seen SMT give such a boost in desktop. Thanks.SMT Zen5 in CB26 gives +37%.
Why would they need to? AMD GPU's run circles around any AMX supported Intel CPU in matrix operations.I'd be surprised if AMD supports AMX.
I think Intel is barking up the wrong tree with AMX. Just my opinion.
