In my view, the strategy of small cores is directly linked to intel's slowness in advancing in chip manufacturing. With no extra space from a denser lithograph, they needed effective cores per area to match the massive MT performance of the Ryzen line up
This strategy is limited by TDP and heating etc...
I believe so...
Yeah this is the sort of stuff discussed when I initially added "Sometime ago I met a self-confessed AMD jock suggesting intels E-cores are just a poor attempt to overshadow AMD's "core count" which can't be achieved with performance cores alone". He did mention limitations in the chips make-up due to higher temps or power consumption hence e-cores are somewhat just filling the gap.
Can't complain though, with or without e-cores ADL's done a fantastic job... it would be interesting to see if e-cores play a more refined role in the long run especially if Intel sticks with monolithic designs... although not sure if this is correct, are earlier rumours of Meteor Lake moving to multi chip modules (MCM) now official or is intel playing DIE HARD with mono-bono-4-life?
Personal opinion...
Intel is struggling to get their node(s) straight for more than 5 years now, and TSMC is waving them from afar...
If Intel could, the E-cores concept wouldn't be on the table for at least another 5, maybe more years. They had to be creative and looked into mobile (phones/tablets and such) industry to their solution.
E-cores work... dont work as intended... Who knows what really Intel and AMD intend... we can only assume and we ought to not believe what they are serving us on their advertising.
The thing is at the end that ADL, as benchmarks show, have the performance to compete. At the cost of power... yes as they are on 10nm (they can call it whatever they like BTW, its still 10nm) against the 5/7nm nodes. Most likely the could do a better job on efficiency but thats not what today is about. Competition is good but sometimes not... And you will understand what Im saying further down.
MCM design wont/cant help them to reduce power. They still have the 10nm at their disposal for the moment and so much they can do.
Only to make fabrication a little more cost effective as smaller dies have better yields. But these things cant be done from 1 day to another.
AMD has taken the MCM path clearly for:
1. The unified design across all segments
2. Smaller dies
Both lead to better profit margins and not better efficiency.
If they haven't had the 5/7nm nodes from TSMC they would be on exactly the same position with intel, power wise. But AMD is working hard to catch up... lol
Hence...
Another matter (or not) that I haven't really see on discussions, after presentation of AM5...
That AMD is catching up on Intel on power. Top tier desktop CPU is now in the 200W (I say 200+W) territory.
We can understand that when:
A 105W TDP CPU has 140+W PPT it means that a 170W TDP CPU has.... ???W PPT... 200W?... 220W?
Those slides suggest the following to me...
That 7950X will have a 220~230W PPT
If you do the math combined on those 2 slides and the fact that 12900K is a 240W PPT, you will find it.
Along with Intel, nVidia, Radeon... we can now welcome AMD CPUs to the inefficiency in the name of competition.
I wonder what will stop them...
Edit: typo(s)