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Intel Xeon "Sapphire Rapids" Officially Shipping in Early 2022

AleksandarK

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Intel's Lisa Spelman, corporate vice president and general manager of the Xeon and Memory Group at Intel Corporation, has yesterday published a blog post talking about Intel's next-generation server platform codenamed Sapphire Rapids. The SPR platform is Intel's biggest step-up in the server processor space, and it is the exact CPU that will power the Aurora exascale supercomputer. Besides improvements to the CPU microarchitecture, the platform itself is bringing many benefits with it as well. It will use the latest industry protocols like DDR5 and PCIe 5.0. This is making a strong combination designed even for exascale supercomputers to be powered by this processor. However, the availability of this CPU was a bit of a mystery until yesterday. Below, you can see the quote from Ms. Lisa Spelman about the availability of said processors.

Lisa Spelman said:
Demand for Sapphire Rapids continues to grow as customers learn more about the benefits of the platform. Given the breadth of enhancements in Sapphire Rapids, we are incorporating additional validation time prior to the production release, which will streamline the deployment process for our customers and partners. Based on this, we now expect Sapphire Rapids to be in production in the first quarter of 2022, with ramp beginning in the second quarter of 2022.


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Give us desktops... regular user doesn't care about this product line...
 
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Give us desktops... regular user doesn't care about this product line...
Why would a regular user care about their enterprise offerings? This isn't for your product segment.
And of course Intel will always lead with their enterprise CPUs, it's where there's most demand and where they make the vast majority of their profits.
 
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Why would a regular user care about their enterprise offerings? This isn't for your product segment.
And of course Intel will always lead with their enterprise CPUs, it's where there's most demand and where they make the vast majority of their profits.
What did I said?
 
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Why would a regular user care about their enterprise offerings? This isn't for your product segment.
And of course Intel will always lead with their enterprise CPUs, it's where there's most demand and where they make the vast majority of their profits.
That hasn’t been the case in a long-long while. New architectures always come to mobile first, HEDT/server CPUs tend to be several months (or recently a year and a half) behind.
 
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