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- Dec 25, 2020
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System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic Intellimouse |
Keyboard | Generic PS/2 |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
In my book, this is a performance increase per watt of 13%.
As Alexander J. Yee (Mysticial) one of the authors of y-cruncher wrote on numberworld.org, it really depends on the workload.
Some instructions (AVX-512) saw a 2x increase (I'm not kidding) others 0%.
View attachment 357974
The AVX-512 gain is massive, that's for sure. Not only that, it also pulls off AVX-512 without heating into a supernova, which is a first - Skylake-X/SP, Cascade Lake-X, Rocket Lake and Alder Lake (earlier samples), as well as Zen 4 to a lesser extent, all do.
Which begs the question, AVX-512 is such a foreign and utterly useless instruction set for consumer-level workloads that makes me believe that AMD developed this architecture and chiplet primarily with Epyc in mind, tailored to the AVX-512/VNNI requirements of AI customers. Essentially, this is a processor for the AI cloud, downsized for a desktop.