Yes, this is also part of why Zen1 sold like hot cakes, because it was well behind the initial PC market transition to DDR4.The reason behind Zen 4 slow sales was mainly the horrible premium asked for AM5 + DDR5 compared to AM4 + DDR4.
Yes, this is also part of why Zen1 sold like hot cakes, because it was well behind the initial PC market transition to DDR4.The reason behind Zen 4 slow sales was mainly the horrible premium asked for AM5 + DDR5 compared to AM4 + DDR4.
Bad for server CPUs, such as Zen ones.Shared L2
Launching new Zen without X3D at least announced to be available very soon is a very bad launch - it's that simple. That matters far more than when technically first chip becomes fully made.I'm not saying you can't launch both at the same time, but the theoretical time you can do that is later than the theoretical time you launch without X3D because the process takes time. It's that simple.
I don't think its horrible, seems to have worked for AMD in the past. The Nvidia comparison isn't relevant as its apples to oranges. The 5090 and 5080 are the same general manufacturing process.Bad for server CPUs, such as Zen ones.
Launching new Zen without X3D at least announced to be available very soon is a very bad launch - it's that simple. That matters far more than when technically first chip becomes fully made.
Nvidia must be doing 80 and 90 class in batches, not perfectly parallel - so why won't they announce them separately? Because it would be very dumb commercial move.
Was AMD crazy to sit on RDNA4 stock till March?And a company is crazy to sit on stock of plain zen when they could be selling it.
Bad for server CPUs, such as Zen ones.
Have you ever met one? They are making super expensive mainframe level hardware for 0.01% of the market and understand well what kind of software runs on it, the clients also understand it.I haven't seen any of their customers complain about it too loudly though...
Client workloads really seem to favor a small number of fatter, area-inefficient cores anyway
These systems have many tenants each and they have told me that they don't see any performance issues of note.
Do they allow a guy paying ten bucks using stolen card to run their custom code on those?one of the systems is handling obscene amounts of transactions on a truly massive data set from many different sources
Umm, I don't believe it's that simple."Client" these day is also a server - I've got a few apps open but Windows reports 4k threads, imagine running a game and some of the background process totally trashes L2, this won't affect just one neighbour cores, but whole CCX - one thread will be enough to trash it.
They have people making alot of money on the payroll for thisClearly a forum full of tech savvy cpu enthusiasts is NOT the best place for Intel and AMD to get product management advice from .
So in the case of problem with software (which is validated in app stores before allowing it to run) that will cause problems to 1 (one) person at the time who had chosen to use that software.Snapdragon X also has the same 4k threads in windows and Macos has similar amount, and these ARM CPUs have shared L2 only.
Which clearly a lot more efficient 😁They have people making alot of money on the payroll for this
Just hope no actual product manager for Intel/AMD is on AT we never know 🤣Clearly a forum full of tech savvy cpu enthusiasts is NOT the best place for Intel and AMD to get product management advice from .
Yes & noWas AMD crazy to sit on RDNA4 stock till March?
The reason behind Zen 4 slow sales was mainly the horrible premium asked for AM5 + DDR5 compared to AM4 + DDR4.
Was AMD crazy to delay RDNA3 in order to sell remaining stocks of RDNA2?Yes & no
You can argue this both ways
Depends on their reasoning which I am not privy to. If there were issues or they believed they would gain a very strategic advantage the no.Was AMD crazy to sit on RDNA4 stock till March?
Intel may have 20% fewer of them now.They have people making alot of money on the payroll for this
Was AMD crazy to sit on RDNA4 stock till March?
It only remotely became a good idea due to how badly NV had fumbled the ball and in it could have really bitten them in the bottom if NV had gotten their supply sorted just a month earlier than they seem to have so far.
Rumor I've heard is that Navi 32 needed multiple respins before it was ready. Not sure how much that influenced the delay.Depends on their reasoning which I am not privy to. If there were issues or they believed they would gain a very strategic advantage the no.
If they did it just to build more stock.... then yes I would say that is pretty silly.
Is this a good faith argument? Genuine question.Bad for server CPUs, such as Zen ones.
Launching new Zen without X3D at least announced to be available very soon is a very bad launch - it's that simple. That matters far more than when technically first chip becomes fully made.
Nvidia must be doing 80 and 90 class in batches, not perfectly parallel - so why won't they announce them separately? Because it would be very dumb commercial move.