• Funderpants
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    6 months ago

    I feel like I’ve been hearing about AMDs “next” CPU having dozens of cores on a bunch of chiplets for the last few generations, then the main gaming consumer parts end up with 6 or 8 or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      The 7950 has 16 cores. I think what the article is suggesting is the very top of the line in the next gen could go potentially double, up to 32. I would imagine if that happened though that the more midline ones would still be in the 12-16 core range. I guess we’ll see when they come out though.

      • Funderpants
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        136 months ago

        Yea here’s hoping. I’m skipping the 7000 series parts and sticking with my 5800x3d, I really want a higher core part that still has all the single ccd x3d advantages, since I game and do CPU heavy work on the same rig.

          • Funderpants
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            26 months ago

            Yes, no desire for all the things that will have to come with this upgrade. I want a huge boost, so sitting out this first wave.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      Most games can’t take advantage of more than a couple cores anyway, and the high-core-count CPUS often sacrifice a little clock speed.

      The optimal gaming CPU is like 4-8 cores but with a high clock speed. The 32+ core machines are for compute heavy tasks like CAD or running simulations. Sometimes compilers.

  • @barsquid
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    106 months ago

    I thought they were already up there on Threadrippers, or am I misunderstanding and that’s either not counting as a CPU or not a single die?

    • @Flex
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      166 months ago

      Threadripper 7000 went up to 64 cores with 8 dies (excluding IO die) , so 8 cores per die.

  • @[email protected]
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    96 months ago

    I’d kill for a single CCD 16 core x3d part. The 7950x3d is tempting with it’s 3d CCD and high clock speed CCD, but since not every game/program knows how to use it properly you end up with hit or miss performance.

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        My biggest concern from what I’ve seen is that the weird hack AMD uses to get programs to run on one set of cores vs the other wasn’t exactly great last I looked and can cause issues when a game tries to move off of one CCD onto the other. That said I haven’t looked into this ever since the CPU first came out so hopefully things are better now.

        How observant are you to micro stutters in a game? That was the biggest reason I got the 5800x3d in the first place, but now that I have a better GPU I can tell that thing struggles. And from what I remember most of the issued you’d have moving from CCD to CCD were more micro stutters vs normal frame rate dips or just lower average frame rates.

        • I only really notice stutters in heavily modded Minecraft, where it’s clearly linked to the garbage collector. In more demanding games I don’t notice any stuttering really. Or at least, none that I can’t easily link to something triggering in the game that is likely causing it.

          Sure, perhaps I have slightly lower average FPS compared to a 7800x3D, but I also use this PC for productivity reasons so there the extra oompf really does help. Still, 97% of a framerate that’s already way higher than what my 144Hz monitors support is still well above what my monitors support. I don’t think the performance difference is really noticeable, other than in certain benchmarks or if you try really hard to see them.

          It’s considerably faster than a 5800x3D though.

    • @Flex
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      26 months ago

      The c variants of zen are for cloud and are more compact variants of the full zen 5 cores, they generally want as many cores in as compact a format as possible.

      We might see 5c show up in SoCs (like the chip in a hypothetical steam deck 2) as well because they want their chips to be as small as possible so they can price their devices as competitively as possible. I don’t think we will see those go up to 32 cores however as there is indeed no need for that many cores on consumer chips.

  • @[email protected]
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    46 months ago

    Doesn’t c stand for e-cores? Packing up to 32 e-cores must be easier than with normal cores.

    Also kinda wish they went the other direction a little, cut cure counts and put more cache across all levels on some cores instead for better single thread performance, a ‘very big’ core so to say. Intel’s cache sizes have been larger then amd since alder lake and there stayed competitive despite their process node disadvantage

    • @Flex
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      6 months ago

      Not quite an e-core but the goal is the same: Make more efficient use of the available die space by packing in more, slower cores.

      The difference is that Intel’s e-cores achieve this by having a different architecture and support less features than their p-cores. E-cores for example do not support multi threading. E-cores are about 1/4 the size of a o-core.

      AMD’s 4c cores support the same features and have the same IPC as full zen 4 cores but operate at a lower clock speed. This reduces thermal output of the core, allowing them to pack in the circuitry much more densely.

      Undoubtedly Intel’s e-cores take advantage of this effect as well and they are in fact quite a bit smaller than 4c: a 4c core is about 1/2 the size of a zen 4 core. The advantage of AMD’s approach is that having the cores be the same simplifies the software side of things.

    • Justin
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      6 months ago

      AMD’s c cores aren’t quite the same as Intel’s e cores. Intel’s e-cores are 1/4 of the size of their P cores, while AMD’s c cores are about the same size as their standard cores, but a bit more square shaped geometrically.

      Intel’s e cores are completely different architectures from their p cores, while the only difference between AMD’s cores are a bit less cache and a bit lower frequency.

      Intel’s are like comparing an Raspberry pi core to a full x86 core, while AMD’s is like a lower binned regular core.

      AMD has “big” cores, too. Their 3d vcache models trade multithreaded performance for more cache. Their “3 core tiers” approach is very obvious in their server line up:

      https://www.servethehome.com/amd-epyc-bergamo-epyc-9754-cloud-native-sp5/

      • qyron
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        56 months ago

        It should. An open technology standard should gain traction over closed proprietary ones.

          • KubeRoot
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            16 months ago

            Aren’t the new Apple chips ARM? If they are, then ARM is absolutely in the present, and proven viable for consumers by Apple.

            • @Linkerbaan
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              16 months ago

              It proves Apple is viable for consumers not ARM.

              The Windows and Linux drivers for arm are severely lacking compared to MacOS Rosetta.

              ARM is further in the development stage than RISC5 but both aren’t near X86 for desktop compatibility yet.

              • KubeRoot
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                16 months ago

                If apple is viable for consumers, and apple uses ARM, then ARM is viable for consumers.

                Windows and Linux being unfortunately behind is not an argument against ARM being viable, it shows it’s not ready - however, apple was in the same situation before they moved to ARM, so theoretically Microsoft could attempt a similar investment and push towards ARM. Apple’s control over both hardware and software certainly helped them, and went well for them.

                That said, maybe it’s a disagreement on terminology. When I say that ARM is viable, I mean that it’s ready to create hardware and software that does what people need it to do. Apple clearly succeeded, now it’s a question of if/when manufacturers start making open hardware and software starts compatibility… Or if maybe another option will succeed instead.

                • @Linkerbaan
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                  16 months ago

                  RISCV is also viable to create hardware and software to do what people need.

                  The software just doesn’t exist yet.