Arachnotronic
Lifer
- Mar 10, 2006
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Sure, power/perf is better, but clocks is what we're talking about.
That's just what Con core design does: clock high.
Frequencies are not comparable, but rest of characteristics you mentioned are mostly are, especially since i extended comparison to GCN3.
This is all irrelevant, assuming 1050 Ti is actually a full GP107. If the rumors turn out true [as in ,1050 Ti will overclock worse by a significant margin than 1060 and it is built on 14nm LPP], then we pretty much have a solid confirmation that 14nm LPP is simply bad for high clocking parts, since we have all seen clocking ability of Pascal (namely the ease of hitting 2Ghz and difficulty of going further). If they don't, great, wait for Zen keeps on.
The thing that I believe bjt2 misses is that Polaris is largely a similar architecture to Tonga. When the designs are similar and you spend a good amount of time optimizing your circuit implementation, you can get higher frequencies on the new process.
Zen is completely different from the Construction cores. Per core, the execution resources have gone up significantly. The sizes of the key buffers (register files, re-order buffer, scheduler, etc.) are all way up. Increasing the sizes of those buffers while keeping frequency high is very tough, which is one of the reasons that Intel's perf/clock improvements have been fairly modest -- they are trying to increase IPC while keeping frequency capability roughly the same (this is something they failed at with Broadwell, but succeeded at with Skylake).