Arkaign
Lifer
- Oct 27, 2006
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Athlon didn't really fail as a foundation, AMD just didn't have the resources to continue what it excelled at: hand optimized die circuits. The K10 (ending with Phenom II) still had superior IPC than the Construction/Cat cores that succeeded it, but the latters' die circuits were completely done by computers. The Construction/Cat cores just were bad follow ons to the K10 line, but AMD learned well with the Zen cores, and the switch to computer generated die circuits gives them the flexibility to do the semi-custom business as well as the near yearly cadence on Zen iterations.
Is anybody really expecting Icelake desktop parts with 8+ cores? Intel's 10nm still seems too much of a mess to allow for any bigger dies or higher frequencies.
10nm Intel is about 7nm TSMC in practical terms, it's just a question of if Intel can get their spit together lol.
However, a huge negative for Intel is that even on equal footing (10nm vs 7nm) they are putting iGPU on die, an absolutely enormous waste of transistors. Hell even today they could cut the iGPU and fit 50-100% more cores on 14nm. On die GPU is something I've absolutely always hated. They're never been good, and a chipset resident version with a bit of dedicated vram would have always been superior. I guess it was just for mobile, but they should have left it there. Notice AMD didn't make the mistake of cramming a GPU onto every Ryzen lol.