Apparently i was wrong with Intel's 48 core chip not having HT (or the following was faked):
Well, there's nothing saying there couldn't be ES chips out there with all kinds of non-final features, but I'd think Intel would leave that to their server/enterprise customers to configure to themselves. Disabling HT in BIOS is trivial, after all, and should be so even on crazy server motherboards. And while Spectre/Meltdown/all rest are only relevant when HT is enabled, I'm guessing most server vendors are either knowingly willing to take that risk or able to disable HT by their own volition. Of course, it might just be disabled by the BIOS by default, but open to being enabled, if Intel wants to be safe but leave options open.
Still, no matter the impressive achievement that this no doubt is, it comes off as ... disappointing compared to the competition based off a rather substantive list of complaints. First off, there was Intel's smarmy "glued-together" comment from last year, that while correctly pointed out to be an actual technical term and not just derogatory, still came off as that - and was clearly intended to be so. And now here they are doing the same thing, just in a way that is more "glued-together" than AMD's solution, as the silicon was never intended for this implementation in the first place. Then there's the fact that this (again!) necessitates a new socket, leaving Intel with
four concurrent sockets (115whatever, 2011, 3647 and whatever this is, >9000 I guess), all of which are relevant in the enterprise/server space. That's a mess if I ever saw one. This, again, speaks to Intel not being forward-looking whatsoever, and shows how utterly unplanned this was when the silicon was designed. Then there's the heat and power that this will no doubt produce. Of course, Epyc Rome will no doubt be able to produce quite a bit of heat, but given how hot Intel's 18-core chips run, this is worrying. Of course, the clocks are lowered, and with a giant socket the IHS will also be gigantic, but still ... Cooling this will not be fun. Then there's this not having hardware fixes for the major security flaws in Intel's arch.
All in all: too little, too late, too flung-together-at-the-last-minute. Not impressed, even if they get it out the door before AMD (which, well, is doubtful given that Rome according to reports is already shipping to select partners).