Since this is a speculation thread, AND no concrete evidence has been produced, I'll "argue" with whomever I choose to as my speculation is just as good as the next guys. Furthermore, the claims are not consistent with AMD's prior behavior and would indicate a departure from a philosophy that we have seen AMD use.
I think more than a one line snarky answer from "people that claim to have insider information" is needed don't you think?
12 cores is a leak. From here:
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...desktop-processors-may-feature-up-to-24-cores
Toms reported this.
Keep in mind that there would likely be CCD variants lower than 12c done simply for binning reasons when a defect disables one of a 2 core complex (sharing L2).
The assumption that there would then be a 24c variant is speculation based on AMD's previous designs.
Yes, but my speculative guesses come with information that backs up the speculation. No trust is needed, just a bit of reasoning. Additionally, I post links to actual information when it is available.
When this all works itself out, I may well be proven wrong, but in a speculation thread, I think that well founded speculation is good discussion. Derailing the good discussion with snarky one liners (not you btw) with no reasoning or proof isn't helpful IMO.
It's a good question. In fact, another good question would be how is AMD planning on combating the "core wars" advertising? It reminds me of P4 days when the "Mhz wars" raged. It was hard to get people off of the metric that had been ingrained for decades as the metric for performance. AMD finally managed to overcome the problem with model numbers.
Core counts are another problem for AMD IMO. How do you now expect people to understand that 24 AMD cores is better than 52 Intel cores (for the many unfortunate people who aren't part of this forum ).
As for the technical answer, I think that it is entirely possible that 2 Zen 6c LP cores would work as well as 4 Intel LP cores for the intended purposes (4 low priority, low compute threads being handled).
Possibly so due to SMT.
I do NOT expect AMD to branch their architecture as Intel has for P and E and LP cores. This hasn't been their philosophy to date, and I don't expect it to be in the future for a number of reasons.