From what I understand Intel's i7-5775C wasn't produced in large numbers yet had performance above and beyond 4-core/8-thread CPU's of the day, so why did Intel abandon development of eDRAM for CPU's? 128MB of eDRAM proved its worth w/the i7-5775C.
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@eidairaman1
So the R&D costs of further developing eDRAM were prohibitive? I can't imagine Intel making much profit off the i7-5775c but it's not like people weren't buying them, it's that Intel wasn't producing them.
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This is also enough close to this topic sample.
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Because it was twice as expensive as the regular model, and they couldn't get past 14nm at the time. The cpu's were too hot.
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Did they?!From what I understand Intel's i7-5775C wasn't produced in large numbers yet had performance above and beyond 4-core/8-thread CPU's of the day, so why did Intel abandon development of eDRAM for CPU's? 128MB of eDRAM proved its worth w/the i7-5775C.
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eDRAM was higher bandwidth than DDR4 and more importantly, latency was about half of the attached DIMMS. I think the biggest reason it failed is that only Apple was interested in this SKU. By that time, the process for the L4 die, 22 nm, should have been cheap and given that it was a small DRAM die, yields should have been very high.5775C was anything but hot, it was actually quite conservatively clocked (reason why it regressed performance over 4790K despite higher IPC) and had tons of die area for heat transfer.
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eDRAM was higher bandwidth than DDR4 and more importantly, latency was about half of the attached DIMMS. I think the biggest reason it failed is that only Apple was interested in this SKU. By that time, the process for the L4 die, 22 nm, should have been cheap and given that it was a small DRAM die, yields should have been very high.
The graph below is from Chips and Cheese and has a logarithmic scale. The blue line is the 5775C. Notice how its latency is much better than Skylake at working sets larger than the 7700k's L3.
View attachment 294620
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i think they are going to go with chiplet HBM2e or some variant in the future.
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It was intended for the IGP, but benefitted applications that had large working sets. Unfortunately, there were very few of those for regular consumers at that time.Indeed, it was great. You'll find that reflects on games, as the 5775C aged the best of all of Intel's former quad cores. Sadly it just didn't shine when it needed to.
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They should test it at that, but off chip DIMMs can not beat eDRAM for latency. The gap in latency is too great; DDR4 2400 is about twice as slow and higher RAM speeds don't improve latency as much as bandwidth.The i7-5775c could beat the 7700k with DDR4 at 2400 Mhz. but what about 3200Mhz.? Even my 5820k system ran its memory faster than 2400Mhz. (2900Mhz.).
I agree with you, please tell it to Intel!!!!!! Get them to further develop eDRAM!They should test it at that, but off chip DIMMs can not beat eDRAM for latency. The gap in latency is too great; DDR4 2400 is about twice as slow and higher RAM speeds don't improve latency as much as bandwidth.
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At what? Sometimes we get carried away by synthetic benchmarks, and a real world application, the gain e% is relatively small, and can be outdone by other simple actions such as higher clock, more cores, more channelsThe i7-5775c could beat the 7700k with DDR4 at 2400 Mhz
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That's it. eDRAM might be the best choice when one needs to integrate DRAM on the same die with the processor, inevitably using the same manufacturing tech. eDRAM as a separate die ... only existed because Intel set out to make it themselves. They could have asked Micron, for example, to manufacture (and help develop) some real DRAM, tuned for low latency.DRAM requires a very different process than SRAM.
eDRAM however means building DRAM with the same machines as you're making SRAM/CPU Logic with. And that seems to have been a much harder problem than Intel expected. (Or at least, they clearly decided to stop making that technology).
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
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Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
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Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
At what? Sometimes we get carried away by synthetic benchmarks, and a real world application, the gain e% is relatively small, and can be outdone by other simple actions such as higher clock, more cores, more channels
If you scale those results by clock speeds, I don't see a material difference.
That's it. eDRAM might be the best choice when one needs to integrate DRAM on the same die with the processor, inevitably using the same manufacturing tech. eDRAM as a separate die ... only existed because Intel set out to make it themselves. They could have asked Micron, for example, to manufacture (and help develop) some real DRAM, tuned for low latency.
By the way, does anyone know what is the bus width or MT/s of the "Crystal Well" eDRAM?