I think we are giving AMD the ST Crown for no reason ARL Retains the ST Crown this gen. I fully expect Panther to be at least 20%+ IPC vs Lion Cove improvements and Arctic Wolf to be 25%+ vs Darkmont plus fixing the Latency regression for AMD i can say 15%+ easily for Zen 6 vs Zen 5.
Let me rephrase. ARL gets beaten in multi-core benchmarks by Zen 5 with a few exceptions. ARL gets beaten by Zen 5 in ST or lightly threaded workloads that are latency dependent. For ST that is not latency bound and especially bandwidth dependent workloads, ARL wins... but that seems to be a minority of applications.
So it seems like having enough cores that can work well at low latency wins most of the time.
Where I disagree here is that gaming drives DIY. You see that in the top processor sales. I'm not saying that DIY is the only part of the market, but it's a much bigger part than 52c would be useful for (as a consumer platforms with consumer prices?)
If course the bulk of the market is just business and grey boxes and non vcache makes sense for volume standard use cases. Tbh that's mostly laptop anyway.
The bulk of the revenue is also in business. DIY is not much in the grand scheme of things.
DIY is only a part of the desktop market.
Most of the desktop market is "Corpos who could have bought a laptop but like the desktop/AIO form factor"
Agree.
4C 4-ever, since nearly no one will ever need more than that. Used to be Intel™. Now the situation is reversed, so it's 16C 4-ever but AMD™, since 2019.
While software is forever moving forward and demanding more of everything, there are limits to the usefulness.
16 bit was pretty pathetic, but 32 bit was quite good. Yes, 64 bit is better, but for most things, 32 bit did just fine. 128bit? Still no need today. Will we ever need it? Maybe, but I am thinking not in my lifetime.
I think core count is the same. Going from 1 to 2 was HUGE. 2 to 4, was still a pretty big deal. 4 to 8? Not so much for not so many people. 8 to 16, only for a handful of niche cases..... and really, most of those cases are better served by a real workstation with more than 2 banks of memory to serve all the hungry cores with.
52 cores? I am just not seeing it. EITHER the cores are so wimpy that having them is not that big of an impact, OR you need a butt ton more than dual channel memory to feed them.... making it too expensive a platform for desktop and laptop consumers. I'll lump AMD's Zen 6 24c48t in the same boat. Seems like only a few people will benefit and it might be hard to keep the processor fed with only 2 channels.
It's 32T thread since 2019 and no one yet has surpassed it. If Intel actually does build >32T consumer processor (on a dual channel platform) I have to wonder what they're smoking.
I am thinking the same thing.
This time it looks like it’ll be Intel that leads the way forward instead of AMD. So funnily enough, the roles are the opposite this time.
It is definitely ironic considering the history. IIRC, when AMD started pushing the core count and Intel stayed focused on ST or lightly threaded app performance, Intel came out ahead in that situation.
This time around, while the landscape is different, I still think that very few real world apps will benefit much from 52c .... and it seems like the latency is a much bigger issue with ARL vs Zen 5, so I am guessing that this will be where the real battle exists .... not the max core count.
If it is max core count critical, then Thread Ripper will dominate. For people that really need 52c plus, a workstation is a much better value proposition.
@511 I guess we have vastly different views of professional and prosumer users. I don't know too many casual users that are doing much 3D rendering, game development, and frequent compression/decompression of 100s of GB of data. To me those exactly summarize professional and prosumer users. I believe that LightningZ71 was referring to office workers on Word/Excel, our parents on Facebook doom scrolling, kids doing homework, people watching a movie, etc.
Agree.
Nope, Amdahl's law is an actual immutable law unlike Moore's observation.
Some day the diminishing returns may still be so cheap and that it is worth it. But the benefit of additional core spam is always diminishing.
Yes, but that is at the end of a long exponential curve .... long after I am dust IMO .