Sorry for being a noob. What is that interface in the bottom left corner of die?Intel die doesn't have that.
Has been confirmed by C&C years ago.What I do find interesting is that CB23 still favors Zen 5 I believe. It makes me think that perhaps CB24 is perhaps more bandwidth dependent vs compute dependent.
No, it's a win for ARL.Depend of the CB version, beside it s easy to do slightly better if you use 240W instead of 200W, i wouldnt call this a win.
That ends up being an operating system benchmark.
There are many reviews that showed that in general real world applications, the 9950X outperforms 285K in multi-treaded applications handily.... just not CB24.there should be a serious review putting 285K v 9950X in scenarios where real speed is measured beyond CB GB. I have strong suspicion intel works HARD to win CB GB #1 bc they've been behind for many years now but doesnt translate to real advantage
Turin is Zen 5, Venice is going to be Zen 6.Interesting. I was certain that the 2nm Turin D would be a 32c CCD using Zen 6c cores while the standard Turin would be 16c of full Zen 6.
Are you certain?
benchmarks already have large difference between windows and linux due to cpu schedulers
mac is irrelevant because Mx
logically the cpu running faster in one OS will run faster in the other too
there should be a serious review putting 285K v 9950X in scenarios where real speed is measured beyond CB GB. I have strong suspicion intel works HARD to win CB GB #1 bc they've been behind for many years now but doesnt translate to real advantage
Only with CB2024 wich seems ultra optimised for ARL, with R23 and R15 it win only due to 20% higher power.No, it's a win for ARL.
Stock-for-stock 285K is more performant than 9950X in CB.
I have a 9950X but will admit to the facts. Overall, the 9950X is more performant, which is why I built around it, but not in CB and a few other apps.
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I wonder how many IOd and CCd variants are planned then.
CCD? Probably two.
- Zen 6
- Zen 6C
IOD? Probably four.
- Desktop
- Server
- Medusa (Laptop)
- Medusa Halo
There’s rumors of two desktop IOD’s. A fancy new 3nm one with the Neural Engine and maybe more CU’s. Plus a cheap 6/4nm one for low-end products that’s stripped down. Not sure, we’ll see.
No cache or interconnect variants?
Remember, already in the Zen 5 generation, there are four different CCDs:Shouldn’t be a need.
they didn't?And why would anybody split mesh to 2 different parts in same silicon?
It is a mesh that operates very much at cclk.It's not a mesh - data can't take different path at different mesh points which have obvious advantage at clock speeds - ringbus can operate at core speed where mesh logic can only operate at much lower frequencies
it's a real mesh lol.And because it's not a mesh but a way to split ring distance to half do not except AMD increase their CCD size over 16 without going to real mesh network scheme
it's a real mesh lol.
Is this qanon for semis nerds or what
Now we need some proper benchmarks.
Seeing this long bar, imagine the 32c Venice Dense die
Sort of.Mesh network can route packets from source to 3 different location.
No?So doing 16 core mesh would result 4x4 grid or designer would get booted from his job instantly.
Turin-D is a 2*8 mesh.just same effect with plain ringbus point to point routing, which is topology AMD seems to be using.
Ahh.Turin is Zen 5, Venice is going to be Zen 6.
I presume the Turin-dense die shot only went by mistake into the Zen 6 thread.
poThree CCD Configurations?New IOD? Could we have a beast trio in 2026:Zen 6 with DDR6 with a new AM6 socket?
Speculate at will.
Yeah, I had a brain fart moment there. My mistake.Turin is Zen 5, Venice is going to be Zen 6.
I presume the Turin-dense die shot only went by mistake into the Zen 6 thread.
Agreed also hope for faster 1:1 memory speed increase and will probably hit 6Ghz on boost clocks!I think AMD will Keep It Simple with Zen 6. 24 cores and ~10% IPC increase, maybe a few hundred MHz frequency increase under load due to lower power with the new node. Put it all together and you've got a solid bump from Zen 5.
Yeah, AMD doesn’t need to go for a moonshot product. Just improve where Zen 5 was weak, i.e. IO die, and make an incremental but logical gain in its strengths.I think AMD will Keep It Simple with Zen 6. 24 cores and ~10% IPC increase, maybe a few hundred MHz frequency increase under load due to lower power with the new node. Put it all together and you've got a solid bump from Zen 5.
Here you go. Whats ARL got? I honestly dont know but Im guessing less than ~350 because I trolled Mr. Biggie Shatz, the biggest Intel shill at WCCFTECH (RIP), with this score multiple times asking what he got with his 285K, and all I got back was deflection and doublespeak. He was proud of his suicide R24 run though.Please, please, please don't misquote me. My reply was specifically in reference to the question, which was about Cinebench performance.
Now please post some CB scores to show that I was correct with my reply.
It'll be decently higher but idk how much.what are your thoughts on fmax with Zen6 DT?
I don't think N2X is, uh, "lower power".24 cores and ~10% IPC increase, maybe a few hundred MHz frequency increase under load due to lower power with the new node
That would mean tripling the L2 capacity and that's just not happening.Just improve where Zen 5 was weak,
Turin-D is a 2*8 mesh.
It's in their ISSCC presentation.
AMD's ISSCC presentation on Zen5.Where did you find that statement?
this is qanon for tech nerds.They did tell that for Zen5 they added ladder optimizations to their ring design which obviously result being able to double ring capacity from 8 to 16. And physical implementation tells that they use that -physical design is to optimize routing distances and with ringbus even with ladders makes it ringular.