Interesting.
But considering the importance of price on the low to mid-range and the relative parity of performance in that part of the stack between AMD and Intel, at the end of the day isn't price the biggest factor in this market segment? And of course the ability to ship huge volume?
I guess the more poignant question is why does Intel currently own this segment? What are they doing to "right?"
Good points all.
I guess the question is if AMD will chose to create a CCX with less cores just for use in the low to mid-range? My thought was that the compute tile, while being produced on the highest cost process (I am still betting it is N3P for desktop and N2 will only be used on DC), current 8 core, N4P Zen 5 CCX is only 70.6mm2, so each of the 8 cores is about 7 mm2 with L2 cache (I allowed 2 core parts to be used for the glue logic). My thought is that there will be lots of 12 core CCX die that don't yield all 12 cores well leaving room for the 10, 8, and 6 core versions. If I am right about the N3P, I expect that Zen 6 12 core CCX will still weigh in around that same number. If it is N2, then it will certainly reach this size (and maybe smaller?). Still your point is quite valid. If mid and low end cost efficiency is the design target, it may well make sense for AMD to create an 8 core CCX for this market.
I am not certain why Intel continues to enjoy such success in the corporate market. I know in the past, Intel offered "bundle" deals on chipsets, mb's, etc, etc. Also, I believe they would penalize (incentivize ?) corporate accounts to have "Intel only" deals.
I am not sure if this is still the case today or not.