• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Intel Sunny Cove Successor Significantly Bigger: Jim Keller

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,230 (7.55/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Sunny Cove is codename for Intel's first truly new performance CPU core design since "Skylake," and made its debut with the company's 10 nm "Ice Lake" processors, packing the first tangible IPC increase in years. VLSI guru Jim Keller is leading the effort to build Intel's future CPU core designs, and dropped a big hint on what to expect, speaking at a gathering in U.C. Berkeley. It's unclear which specific core Keller is referring to. The immediate successor to "Sunny Cove" is codenamed "Willow Cove," and Intel's own public sketch hints at an incremental upgrade over Sunny Cove, with faster caches and process-level optimization. It's only with "Golden Cove," slated for 2021, that Intel speaks of its next round of IPC increases (dubbed "ST perf"). It's plausible that Keller is referring to this core since a 2021 launch would fit better with a 2018-19 design phase.

In his talk, Keller describes Intel's next big CPU core as being "significantly bigger" than "Sunny Cove," with its 800-wide instruction window, and "massive" data- and branch-predictors, to put Intel back on a linear performance growth trajectory between generations. Keller also commented on this being a "mindset change" at Intel, which over the past decade, only delivered minor IPC increments between generations, and focused on other areas, such as efficiency. In stark contrast, through the 1990s and 2000s, Intel delivered IPC leaps between generations, such as the one between "Netburst" and "Conroe," and onwards to "Nehalem." These were in-part helped by rapid process advancements that slowed in the 2010s as Intel approached the sub-10 nm scale.



The video presentation by U.C. Berkeley follows.


View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Feb 11, 2009
Messages
5,546 (0.96/day)
System Name Cyberline
Processor Intel Core i7 2600k -> 12600k
Motherboard Asus P8P67 LE Rev 3.0 -> Gigabyte Z690 Auros Elite DDR4
Cooling Tuniq Tower 120 -> Custom Watercoolingloop
Memory Corsair (4x2) 8gb 1600mhz -> Crucial (8x2) 16gb 3600mhz
Video Card(s) AMD RX480 -> RX7800XT
Storage Samsung 750 Evo 250gb SSD + WD 1tb x 2 + WD 2tb -> 2tb MVMe SSD
Display(s) Philips 32inch LPF5605H (television) -> Dell S3220DGF
Case antec 600 -> Thermaltake Tenor HTCP case
Audio Device(s) Focusrite 2i4 (USB)
Power Supply Seasonic 620watt 80+ Platinum
Mouse Elecom EX-G
Keyboard Rapoo V700
Software Windows 10 Pro 64bit
Jim motherffing Keller, back at it again
 
Joined
Oct 8, 2015
Messages
769 (0.23/day)
Location
Earth's Troposphere
System Name 3 "rigs"-gaming/spare pc/cruncher
Processor R7-5800X3D/i7-7700K/R9-7950X
Motherboard Asus ROG Crosshair VI Extreme/Asus Ranger Z170/Asus ROG Crosshair X670E-GENE
Cooling Bitspower monoblock ,custom open loop,both passive and active/air tower cooler/air tower cooler
Memory 32GB DDR4/32GB DDR4/64GB DDR5
Video Card(s) Gigabyte RX6900XT Alphacooled/AMD RX5700XT 50th Aniv./SOC(onboard)
Storage mix of sata ssds/m.2 ssds/mix of sata ssds+an m.2 ssd
Display(s) Dell UltraSharp U2410 , HP 24x
Case mb box/Silverstone Raven RV-05/CoolerMaster Q300L
Audio Device(s) onboard/onboard/onboard
Power Supply 3 Seasonics, a DeltaElectronics, a FractalDesing
Mouse various/various/various
Keyboard various wired and wireless
VR HMD -
Software W10.someting or another,all 3
Why just now they (Intel) rejoining the inovative part of the scene , as ever since "Skylake" , it's as if Intel was in retirement cashing pension coupons or viewed another way , a multy year sabbatical.
So , in another parallel universe, I am safekeeping my 2 entry-level Skylake cpu's one being a Pentium spec whilst the other is a Celeron spec , having them donated to museums all the while story talking my children/grandchildren on how the x86 cpu's "war's" were "fought" and reminiscent of the era's when Intel was top dog in most of those , until "Ivy-Lake" .

"Good night and faa iuu"
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20190930-102540~2.png
    Screenshot_20190930-102540~2.png
    257.5 KB · Views: 368
Joined
Jun 29, 2018
Messages
537 (0.23/day)
As usual from Intel nowadays: more projections, more PR slides, more announcements. Wake me up when the products are on shelves instead.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
As usual from Intel nowadays: more projections, more PR slides, more announcements. Wake me up when the products are on shelves instead.

And Jim has lowered himself to marketing for Intel lol

All I hear is inadequacy like a truck jacked up 2ft.
This is so far away that newborns will be running around asking where it's at lol
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,747 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Why just now they (Intel) rejoining the inovative part of the scene , as ever since "Skylake" , it's as if Intel was in retirement cashing pension coupons or viewed another way , a multy year sabbatical.
There have been meaningful architectural upgrades in Intel CPUs. Haswell and Skylake are OKish updates. Since Skylake they have been stuck at 14nm which is their main problem. They seem to have architectures ready but 10nm was intended to be in full production in 2016. This did not happen and Intel has been limping along on Skylake and 14nm ever since.

We can speculate why they have not backported for example Sunny Cove to 14nm but there are good technical reasons why this would not be viable. It is bigger which also means hotter. Backporting will take a year or year and a half which Intel architecture engineers thought was reasonable timeframe to get 10nm running. That did not pan out.
 

FordGT90Concept

"I go fast!1!11!1!"
Joined
Oct 13, 2008
Messages
26,259 (4.46/day)
Location
IA, USA
System Name BY-2021
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile)
Motherboard MSI B550 Gaming Plus
Cooling Scythe Mugen (rev 5)
Memory 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT
Storage Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI)
Case Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+
Power Supply Enermax Platimax 850w
Mouse Nixeus REVEL-X
Keyboard Tesoro Excalibur
Software Windows 10 Home 64-bit
Benchmark Scores Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare.
Welp, Intel is slated to make a come back in 2021. AMD better milk it while they can.

Honestly, it all makes sense. Intel can't move to 10 nm because the architecture...which dates back to Nehalem...isn't meant for it. Intel needed to think outside of the box with a new architecture that can transition to 10 nm and beyond. That's what Keller does: new architectures optimized for new nodes.

And Jim has lowered himself to marketing for Intel lol
I think he gave this talk at U.C. Berkley to excite the next generation of electrical engineers. There's a whole lot of doom and gloom out there about advancing nodes and Keller is really the only one publicly challenging it.


Edit: I wouldn't be surprised if what Jim Keller has been working on is forked from *Cove products (as in parallel to or after Golden Cove). Keller does the architectural work then leaves. It's handed over to production at that point which can take a long time to improve and test. To hire Keller and then limit him to only modifying your existing cores--it's a waste of effort. Whatever he's working on is going to be like the jump to Conroe or Nehalem.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
Welp, Intel is slated to make a come back in 2021. AMD better milk it while they can.

Honestly, it all makes sense. Intel can't move to 10 nm because the architecture...which dates back to Nehalem...isn't meant for it. Intel needed to think outside of the box with a new architecture that can transition to 10 nm and beyond. That's what Keller does: new architectures optimized for new nodes.


I think he gave this talk at U.C. Berkley to excite the next generation of electrical engineers.

With what? More quad cores?
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,747 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Honestly, it all makes sense. Intel can't move to 10 nm because the architecture...which dates back to Nehalem...isn't meant for it. Intel needed to think outside of the box with a new architecture that can transition to 10 nm and beyond.
Intel has architecture ready for 10nm but 10nm manufacturing itself is missing. Cannon Lake was die shinked Skylake (that failed in manufacturing, not architecture or design) and Sunny Cove/Ice Lake was intended to be updated architecture on 10nm but it has been waiting on manufacturing for a couple years now.
 

FordGT90Concept

"I go fast!1!11!1!"
Joined
Oct 13, 2008
Messages
26,259 (4.46/day)
Location
IA, USA
System Name BY-2021
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile)
Motherboard MSI B550 Gaming Plus
Cooling Scythe Mugen (rev 5)
Memory 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT
Storage Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI)
Case Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+
Power Supply Enermax Platimax 850w
Mouse Nixeus REVEL-X
Keyboard Tesoro Excalibur
Software Windows 10 Home 64-bit
Benchmark Scores Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare.
Architecture and process manufacturing go hand in hand. Skylake and sons are effectively a square peg Intel has been trying to ram into a round hole (10nm process) for three years. Splash a dose of insanity on top (doing the same thing expecting different results) and that's pretty much where Intel was, is, and will be until the chips Keller are working on reaches the market.

Remember that Nehalem is almost 11 years old now and was originally designed for 45 nm process. They've been iterating on the same fundamental architecture for far too long. Tick-tock...you eventually got to ring the chime ushering in a new tick-tock.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,747 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Architecture and process go hand in hand. Skylake and sons are effectively a square peg Intel has been trying to ram into a round hole (10nm process) for three years. Splash a dose of insanity on top (doing the same thing expecting different results) and that's pretty much where Intel was, is, and will be until the chips Keller are working on reaches the market.
No they don't. There are some parts of architecture that need to be designed for the intended manufacturing process but it is not strictly tied to one. Just look at Zen or GPUs that are manufactured in different fabs - for example Zen in GF and TSMC, GPUs in TSMC but also in Samsung or GF. Due to in-house foundries Intel has process and architecture more closely tied together but moving the architecture to another manufacturing process is not difficult in itself but it is pretty time-consuming (and expensive).

Keller's main area of expertise is architecture, not manufacturing. While he probably has enough power to impact manufacturing that is a whole different area.
 

FordGT90Concept

"I go fast!1!11!1!"
Joined
Oct 13, 2008
Messages
26,259 (4.46/day)
Location
IA, USA
System Name BY-2021
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile)
Motherboard MSI B550 Gaming Plus
Cooling Scythe Mugen (rev 5)
Memory 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT
Storage Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI)
Case Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+
Power Supply Enermax Platimax 850w
Mouse Nixeus REVEL-X
Keyboard Tesoro Excalibur
Software Windows 10 Home 64-bit
Benchmark Scores Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare.
No they don't. There are some parts of architecture that need to be designed for the intended manufacturing process but it is not strictly tied to one. Just look at Zen or GPUs that are manufactured in different fabs - for example Zen in GF and TSMC, GPUs in TSMC but also in Samsung or GF. Due to in-house foundries Intel has process and architecture more closely tied together but moving the architecture to another manufacturing process is not difficult in itself but it is pretty time-consuming (and expensive).
Zen was designed for 14nm. GCN was designed for 28nm. GCN resulted in a power hungry monster at 7nm. RDNA establishes a new baseline for AMD that will likely translate well to 5nm.

Hopefully not monolithic dies. Chiplets are the future.
Intel will make a comeback for sure but people think AMD will stay still and are unable to fight back in 2021.
The thing that's going to bite Intel in the ass is that their process tech has fallen behind. They'll need something better than 10 nm to answer AMD in 2021 when AMD will probably start shipping some 5 nm products.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
Hopefully not monolithic dies. Chiplets are the future.
Intel will make a comeback for sure but people think AMD will stay still and are unable to fight back in 2021.

Yep, cores are about maxed, now. There's no point spending wafers and power budget on that (software is so far behind). Use the coming shrinks to widen everything and add lots of cache.

Zen 3 is already rumored to start that. If true, then you can expect a doubling down on that.

And Intel will still have dick for manufacturing.
 
Joined
Sep 6, 2013
Messages
3,328 (0.81/day)
Location
Athens, Greece
System Name 3 desktop systems: Gaming / Internet / HTPC
Processor Ryzen 5 5500 / Ryzen 5 4600G / FX 6300 (12 years latter got to see how bad Bulldozer is)
Motherboard MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max (1) / MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max (2) / Gigabyte GA-990XA-UD3
Cooling Νoctua U12S / Segotep T4 / Snowman M-T6
Memory 32GB - 16GB G.Skill RIPJAWS 3600+16GB G.Skill Aegis 3200 / 16GB JUHOR / 16GB Kingston 2400MHz (DDR3)
Video Card(s) ASRock RX 6600 + GT 710 (PhysX)/ Vega 7 integrated / Radeon RX 580
Storage NVMes, ONLY NVMes/ NVMes, SATA Storage / NVMe boot(Clover), SATA storage
Display(s) Philips 43PUS8857/12 UHD TV (120Hz, HDR, FreeSync Premium) ---- 19'' HP monitor + BlitzWolf BW-V5
Case Sharkoon Rebel 12 / CoolerMaster Elite 361 / Xigmatek Midguard
Audio Device(s) onboard
Power Supply Chieftec 850W / Silver Power 400W / Sharkoon 650W
Mouse CoolerMaster Devastator III Plus / CoolerMaster Devastator / Logitech
Keyboard CoolerMaster Devastator III Plus / CoolerMaster Devastator / Logitech
Software Windows 10 / Windows 10&Windows 11 / Windows 10
A bigger core needs, I guess, smaller manufacturing. So, this is nice and it will push AMD to NOT stop innovating, but if Intel's 7nm ends up like the 10nm mess, those cores are going to end up in dual and quad core models, like with today's 10nm products. And it is difficult to trust Intel. I mean TSMC got over their 20nm fiasco in no time. Intel is hitting it's head on a wall for 4 years. Can someone really trust them with 7nm? If they get it right from the beginning maybe. If they face problems...
 
Joined
Jan 8, 2017
Messages
9,434 (3.28/day)
System Name Good enough
Processor AMD Ryzen R9 7900 - Alphacool Eisblock XPX Aurora Edge
Motherboard ASRock B650 Pro RS
Cooling 2x 360mm NexXxoS ST30 X-Flow, 1x 360mm NexXxoS ST30, 1x 240mm NexXxoS ST30
Memory 32GB - FURY Beast RGB 5600 Mhz
Video Card(s) Sapphire RX 7900 XT - Alphacool Eisblock Aurora
Storage 1x Kingston KC3000 1TB 1x Kingston A2000 1TB, 1x Samsung 850 EVO 250GB , 1x Samsung 860 EVO 500GB
Display(s) LG UltraGear 32GN650-B + 4K Samsung TV
Case Phanteks NV7
Power Supply GPS-750C
Things such as huge instruction windows and complicated branch prediction logic have proven to rear their head into extremely poor inefficiencies in terms of power and area relative to the speedup they provide.

It's a bad trade-off that only gets worse the more you do it, ILP is bound to hit a hard limit and no matter how much you dedicate logic to extract it you will reach a point where it simply wont give any advantage whatsoever. Moore's law is dying and these nuclear options that Keller is putting forward are proof of it.

Just look at Zen or GPUs that are manufactured in different fabs - for example Zen in GF and TSMC, GPUs in TSMC but also in Samsung or GF.

No, that's exactly the point. They are manufactured in different fabs precisely because they have been designed with that specific fabrication process in mind.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Nov 18, 2010
Messages
7,530 (1.47/day)
Location
Rīga, Latvia
System Name HELLSTAR
Processor AMD RYZEN 9 5950X
Motherboard ASUS Strix X570-E
Cooling 2x 360 + 280 rads. 3x Gentle Typhoons, 3x Phanteks T30, 2x TT T140 . EK-Quantum Momentum Monoblock.
Memory 4x8GB G.SKILL Trident Z RGB F4-4133C19D-16GTZR 14-16-12-30-44
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse RX 7900XTX. Water block. Crossflashed.
Storage Optane 900P[Fedora] + WD BLACK SN850X 4TB + 750 EVO 500GB + 1TB 980PRO+SN560 1TB(W11)
Display(s) Philips PHL BDM3270 + Acer XV242Y
Case Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO
Audio Device(s) SMSL RAW-MDA1 DAC
Power Supply Fractal Design Newton R3 1000W
Mouse Razer Basilisk
Keyboard Razer BlackWidow V3 - Yellow Switch
Software FEDORA 41
Architecture and process manufacturing go hand in hand. Skylake and sons are effectively a square peg Intel has been trying to ram into a round hole (10nm process) for three years. Splash a dose of insanity on top (doing the same thing expecting different results) and that's pretty much where Intel was, is, and will be until the chips Keller are working on reaches the market.

Remember that Nehalem is almost 11 years old now and was originally designed for 45 nm process. They've been iterating on the same fundamental architecture for far too long. Tick-tock...you eventually got to ring the chime ushering in a new tick-tock.

I would say there is a sum of unfortunate mishaps so both you are right. This quite old news BTW they did that already in Haifa. Raja had more interesting retweets before. Jim and Tim did together keynotes also last year...

132961
 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,747 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Zen was designed for 14nm. GCN was designed for 28nm. GCN resulted in a power hungry monster at 7nm. RDNA establishes a new baseline for AMD that will likely translate well to 5nm.
Zen2 is still Zen with minor improvements and it seems to be fine in 7nm.
GCN resulted in a power hungry monster at 14nm (and 28nm) as well :)
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
Zen2 is still Zen with minor improvements and it seems to be fine in 7nm.
GCN resulted in a power hungry monster at 14nm (and 28nm) as well :)

GCN is power efficient at the correct clocks/V. Unfortunately, the design did not leave enough clock to compete effectively. It's like running zen 1 at 4.2/4.3 GHz.

The complete lack of binning really exacerbated it.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,747 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Hopefully not monolithic dies. Chiplets are the future.
In enterprise, servers, manycore CPUs definitely.

On desktop? If manufacturer is willing to do multiple dies, monolithic should have the potential to be better. Die sizes were reasonable for 8 cores on 12/14/16nm - Zen/Zen+ at ~200mm^2 and 9900K at ~175mm^2. From 12nm to 7nm there is 40-60% area reduction. Chiplets may come into play for other reasons though - some reports on Intel 10nm failures had things to say about IO and AMD has stated IO does not scale down well any more.

It will be interesting to see what AMD will do in terms of APUs next time around. Raven Ridge and Picasso are both monolithic.
 
Joined
Jun 29, 2018
Messages
537 (0.23/day)
In enterprise, servers, manycore CPUs definitely.

On desktop? If manufacturer is willing to do multiple dies, monolithic should have the potential to be better. Die sizes were reasonable for 8 cores on 12/14/16nm - Zen/Zen+ at ~200mm^2 and 9900K at ~175mm^2. From 12nm to 7nm there is 40-60% area reduction. Chiplets may come into play for other reasons though - some reports on Intel 10nm failures had things to say about IO and AMD has stated IO does not scale down well any more.

It will be interesting to see what AMD will do in terms of APUs next time around. Raven Ridge and Picasso are both monolithic.

AMD was able to kill "multiple birds with one stone" by sharing the processing chiplets between enterprise workstation, server and desktop CPUs. They can make a lot of them cheaply, bin appropriately and reap the benefits of economy of scale. Since they are smaller the defect ratios are lower than monolithic. Not to mention research and tooling costs.

For the next gen APU I'd like to see a chiplet with combo IO+GPU die. It would make sense since the IMC is on the IO die already.
 
Joined
Nov 24, 2017
Messages
853 (0.33/day)
Location
Asia
Processor Intel Core i5 4590
Motherboard Gigabyte Z97x Gaming 3
Cooling Intel Stock Cooler
Memory 8GiB(2x4GiB) DDR3-1600 [800MHz]
Video Card(s) XFX RX 560D 4GiB
Storage Transcend SSD370S 128GB; Toshiba DT01ACA100 1TB HDD
Display(s) Samsung S20D300 20" 768p TN
Case Cooler Master MasterBox E501L
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1150
Power Supply Corsair VS450
Mouse A4Tech N-70FX
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores BaseMark GPU : 250 Point in HD 4600
When you fabricate your cores on 14nm, it will bigger than 10nm.
 

ppn

Joined
Aug 18, 2015
Messages
1,231 (0.36/day)
In enterprise, servers, manycore CPUs definitely.

On desktop? If manufacturer is willing to do multiple dies, monolithic should have the potential to be better. Die sizes were reasonable for 8 cores on 12/14/16nm - Zen/Zen+ at ~200mm^2 and 9900K at ~175mm^2. From 12nm to 7nm there is 40-60% area reduction. Chiplets may come into play for other reasons though - some reports on Intel 10nm failures had things to say about IO and AMD has stated IO does not scale down well any more.

It will be interesting to see what AMD will do in terms of APUs next time around. Raven Ridge and Picasso are both monolithic.

40% area reduction is more accurate, we can drop the 60% number entirely.

Zen is 44mm^2 per CCX (60 mm^2 when L3 is doubled), and ZEN2 is 38 mm^2 L3 included, so we have 38/60 or 36% reduction.
this is Not 7nm, more like 10nm shrink.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 14, 2016
Messages
32 (0.01/day)
As an AMD user , "In Keller we shall all trust" the dude made such great architectures throughout the last 2+ decades , I believe whatever he is working on the Intel side he will design/redesing it for a huge leap over their current architectures.
 
Joined
Oct 18, 2013
Messages
6,184 (1.53/day)
Location
Over here, right where you least expect me to be !
System Name The Little One
Processor i5-11320H @4.4GHZ
Motherboard AZW SEI
Cooling Fan w/heat pipes + side & rear vents
Memory 64GB Crucial DDR4-3200 (2x 32GB)
Video Card(s) Iris XE
Storage WD Black SN850X 4TB m.2, Seagate 2TB SSD + SN850 4TB x2 in an external enclosure
Display(s) 2x Samsung 43" & 2x 32"
Case Practically identical to a mac mini, just purrtier in slate blue, & with 3x usb ports on the front !
Audio Device(s) Yamaha ATS-1060 Bluetooth Soundbar & Subwoofer
Power Supply 65w brick
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2
Keyboard Logitech G613 mechanical wireless
Software Windows 10 pro 64 bit, with all the unnecessary background shitzu turned OFF !
Benchmark Scores PDQ
Hey Jim, this is 2002 calling, and we want all our outdated, stone-aged cpus back, like, yesterday...

jeez, whatasnoozefest........
 
Top