@[email protected] to [email protected] • 11 months agoLinux 6.8 Network Optimizations Can Boost TCP Performance For Many Concurrent Connections By ~40%www.phoronix.comexternal-linkmessage-square32fedilinkarrow-up1283arrow-down10cross-posted to: [email protected][email protected][email protected]
arrow-up1283arrow-down1external-linkLinux 6.8 Network Optimizations Can Boost TCP Performance For Many Concurrent Connections By ~40%www.phoronix.com@[email protected] to [email protected] • 11 months agomessage-square32fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected][email protected][email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink17•11 months agoAMD has been putting a lot of L3 cache on their consumer CPUs. The 5800X3D has 96mb of L3 cache.
minus-squareKarnalinkfedilinkEnglish5•11 months agoYes, that’s true. Only if Intel follows the same in future. On a separate note, 5800X3D seems to be most efficient (throughput/watt) consumer grade CPU out there right now.
minus-squareAtemulinkfedilink7•11 months ago On a separate note, 5800X3D seems to be most efficient (throughput/watt) consumer grade CPU out there right now. Pretty sure the 7800x3D surpasses it and the 7950x3D is no slouch either.
minus-square@dailink4•11 months agoMan looking at my old 5960x with it’s 20mb of cache from 2014, and Intel’s current top consumer chip with 36mb. Crazy to think Intel were ‘ahead of the curve’ so long ago, those x99 chips are still relevant compared to some AM4 chips.
minus-squareKarnalinkfedilinkEnglish8•11 months agoThat’s definitely a CPU for server (unless you are a general consumer with lots of $ 🙂 ).
minus-squarequpadalinkfedilink3•11 months agoThere definitely are vendors ignoring common sense and putting socket SP5 on desktop boards. No argument about the price, I think list on these is something like $13k USD.
AMD has been putting a lot of L3 cache on their consumer CPUs. The 5800X3D has 96mb of L3 cache.
Yes, that’s true. Only if Intel follows the same in future.
On a separate note, 5800X3D seems to be most efficient (throughput/watt) consumer grade CPU out there right now.
Pretty sure the 7800x3D surpasses it and the 7950x3D is no slouch either.
Man looking at my old 5960x with it’s 20mb of cache from 2014, and Intel’s current top consumer chip with 36mb.
Crazy to think Intel were ‘ahead of the curve’ so long ago, those x99 chips are still relevant compared to some AM4 chips.
Their top-of-the-range Epyc 9684X has 1152MB :)
That’s definitely a CPU for server (unless you are a general consumer with lots of $ 🙂 ).
There definitely are vendors ignoring common sense and putting socket SP5 on desktop boards.
No argument about the price, I think list on these is something like $13k USD.