cdawall
where the hell are my stars
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2006
- Messages
- 27,680 (4.13/day)
- Location
- Houston
System Name | All the cores |
---|---|
Processor | 2990WX |
Motherboard | Asrock X399M |
Cooling | CPU-XSPC RayStorm Neo, 2x240mm+360mm, D5PWM+140mL, GPU-2x360mm, 2xbyski, D4+D5+100mL |
Memory | 4x16GB G.Skill 3600 |
Video Card(s) | (2) EVGA SC BLACK 1080Ti's |
Storage | 2x Samsung SM951 512GB, Samsung PM961 512GB |
Display(s) | Dell UP2414Q 3840X2160@60hz |
Case | Caselabs Mercury S5+pedestal |
Audio Device(s) | Fischer HA-02->Fischer FA-002W High edition/FA-003/Jubilate/FA-011 depending on my mood |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime 1200w |
Mouse | Thermaltake Theron, Steam controller |
Keyboard | Keychron K8 |
Software | W10P |
Considering IBM produces chips that are nearly identical to Bulldozer with four integer clusters and they don't call that a quad-core, I'd say AMD is definitively wrong.
Not to nit pick, but isn't this the exact opposite of what you said earlier? I though AMD was the only CPU to ever attempt this...
They are wide cores. This lawsuit will likely force AMD to call them cores too.
Doubtful. AMD can create words to describe things just as well as the next guy. If AMD can't call what they consider a module a module, I guess Intel will have to ditch HyperThreading in favor for SMT. That is literally what you are saying needs to happen.
It would still be a 4-threaded core. A lot of enterprise RISC processors already handle 8-threads per core (many FPUs and ALUs in each) so that isn't exactly new.
Difference is those only have ONE integer and ONE FPU, not TWO and ONE.
Go ahead and run your benchmarks then. I'm waiting. Here's the post, by the way. Spoiler: it will never reach 95%+ that an actual dual core would.
I was very specific with the workloads that would show near 100% scaling, I would wager you cannot prove me wrong, but after reading your argument you find one useless benchmark (not real world scenario) that only uses the FPU for calculations and claim I am incorrect. As has been said a multitude of times the FPU isn't used for the majority of calculations. The real issue behind AMD isn't the configuration of the modules it is the shit design of the internal cores themselves. The module works excellent and if they were stronger cores the pure idea of this lawsuit wouldn't even exist. That my friend is actually the basic design of Zen mind you.
Last edited: