No end user does, but forgetting/ignoring and/or neglecting the fundamental structure and architecture of ZEN2 can lead to false statements.
Focusing too much on architecture and semicinductor manufacturing can lead to false statements as well.
I prefer a more general approach, because it makes sense. Because we're talking about products, not how they're made. And products are defined by performance, features, power consumption, size, price etc. They are not defined by architecture, IPC or node size.
People on this forum tend to focus way to much on how CPUs are made and it likely affects their decisions (as consumers, maybe as investors).
The obvious example (on the "investor" side) is the ongoing discussion about AMD's profitability.
Most people on this forum focus on 7nm, chiplets, being fabless, having unified architecture with little waste and so on. It's all amazing, right? Especially in comparison with Intel's large, monolithic dies.
But others say that AMD does not control manufacturing, that they're competing for 7nm supply, that they're fully dependent on a single provider that will exploit this situation.
I can't tell you how many times I've been attacked here for this kind of "heresy".
And then the financial statements arrive and guess who was right?
You keep thinking Intel wise and how they segment and construct their CPUs.
I'm not sure what this sentence means.
I don't think "Intel-wise". I think "me-wise". If you get an impression that it sounds Intel-ish, that's because it likely does. As I said: I prefer their model and I feel more connected to how they position and market their products. I won't deny that.
The 4700U is probably the flagship CPU for the mobile market utilizing a full chiplet/CCD... We will eventually see 4c and 6c parts too out of the 8core chiplet.
I’m not sure what is your point here...
The point is: you've earlier said
Does anyone wonder why this 4700U is a 8c/8t and not a 4c/8t? It has (IMO) direct relation to the 8core (CCD) chiplet design which is universal to all market segments. AMD probably cant "afford" a design change.
which sounded like if you though it must be 8 cores because the die design is made for that.
Obviously, AMD could launch a whole lineup of mobile SoCs based on Zen2 die and none of them would go above 4-6 cores.
So, the word “almost” has lost all of its meaning all of sudden... right!
I only believe in how "almost" is defined in math, which is the opposite of how you seem to do it.