• @[email protected]
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    36 hours ago

    It’s now almost 8 years since AMD revealed Ryzen, and Intel still can’t beat it.

    That feels a slight bit unfair.

    For non-gaming workloads, they’re basically sitting on par or better because of the giant pile of e-cores, and for single-threaded performance (on p-cores) they’re also on par to slightly ahead.

    Sure, the x3d chips are the gaming kings and no argument here, but that’s not moving volume - even AMD is all-in on the datacenter side because their gaming/consumer side sales have evaporated into nothingness.

    Intel’s problem isn’t an inability to design CPUs that are competitive, it’s an inability to create production-ready processes that are competitive with TSMC.

    At some point they’re going to have to decide if spending endless billions on processes that aren’t competitive is the best use of their resources. Owning the ability to make your product is super important, but for certain market segments (client desktop and laptop) maybe going ‘fuck it’ and fabbing on the best process you can find so that your CPUs come out competitive is probably the way to go - and, honestly, is pretty much already what they’ve done with ARL.

    I’d also maybe agree that the pricing is an issue: they’re not industry-leading anymore but they’ve kept that pricing which almost immediately makes them less appealing than AMD if you don’t need something Intel is offering you (like the accelerators in scalable Xeons or whatever). ARL immediately made me go ‘How much? What the bleep?’ when they announced pricing, because uh, they’re way off on what they really should be asking.

    • @Buffalox
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      2 hours ago

      You make some good points. But I do want to make some comments.

      non-gaming workloads, they’re basically sitting on par or better

      The testing I’ve seen, the CPU does deliver decent performance numbers for productivity. but it does that at too high TDP, using above the MAX rate of 250 Watt, and despite the better node, it still has worse PPW.
      The reviews I’ve seen rate the CPU from flop to meh, with some saying it’s released to early, because the platform is simply buggy.
      So the Ultra 9 285K delivers slightly better in productivity than the Ryzen 9950X, but it does that at higher power consumption, despite the better TSMC 3nm production node. Where AMD is made on 4nm.

      So it does have some wins, but I’ll maintain Intel doesn’t beat Ryzen overall, and Intel is only achieving this on the back of outside higher end production than AMD is using.

      Intel’s problem isn’t an inability to design CPUs that are competitive, it’s an inability to create production-ready processes that are competitive with TSMC.

      I’ll still say Intel is a bit behind on the design side, but yes manufacturing is where Intels future will probably be decided.
      In the past, Intel always had the advantage of superior production, and could always power through squeezing out a bit extra from both design and process technology.
      But with Arrow Lake, they fail to surpass AMD despite e newer gen process.

      I agree 100% regarding the pricing, but from Intels viewpoint, they are selling the Ultra 9 285K CPU similar in productivity performance to Ryzen 9950X at about the same price. At least here in Denmark in retail they are very close with Ryzen being $30 cheaper. Other markets may have different prices. But for gaming the price is absolutely horrific 50% more expensive than the 7800X3D!!

      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        too high TDP, using above the MAX rate of 250 Watt

        Agreed. Intel’s design philosophy seems to be ‘space heater that does math’ for some reason. That’s been true since at least 10th gen, if not before then. I don’t know if it’s just chasing benchmark wins at any cost, or if they’re firmly of the opinion that hot and loud is fine as long as it’s fast and no customers will care - which I don’t really think is true anymore - or what, but they’ve certainly invested heavily in CPUs that push the literal limits of physics while trying to cool them.

        Intel always had the advantage of superior production

        That really stopped being true in the Skylake era when TSMC leapfrogged them and Intel was doing their 14nm++++++++ dance. I mean they did a shockingly good job of keeping that node relevant and competitive, but the were really only relevant and competitive on it until AMD caught up and exceeded their IPC with Ryzen 3000.

        about the same price

        Yeah, if gaming is your use case there’s exactly zero Intel products you should even be considering. There’s nothing that’s remotely competitive with a 7800x3d, and hell, for most people and games, even a 5800x3d is overkill.

        And of course, those are both last-gen parts, so that’s about to get even worse with the 9800x3d.

        For productivity, I guess if you’re mandated to use Intel or Intel cpus are the only validated ones it’s a choice. But ‘at the same price’ is the problem: there’s no case where I’d want to buy Intel over AMD if they cost the same and perform similarly, if for no other reason than I won’t need something stupid like a 360mm AIO to cool the damn thing.