T0@st
News Editor
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2023
- Messages
- 2,619 (3.56/day)
- Location
- South East, UK
System Name | The TPU Typewriter |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 5600 (non-X) |
Motherboard | GIGABYTE B550M DS3H Micro ATX |
Cooling | DeepCool AS500 |
Memory | Kingston Fury Renegade RGB 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3600 CL16 |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Radeon RX 7800 XT 16 GB Hellhound OC |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME SSD |
Display(s) | Lenovo Legion Y27q-20 27" QHD IPS monitor |
Case | GameMax Spark M-ATX (re-badged Jonsbo D30) |
Audio Device(s) | FiiO K7 Desktop DAC/Amp + Philips Fidelio X3 headphones, or ARTTI T10 Planar IEMs |
Power Supply | ADATA XPG CORE Reactor 650 W 80+ Gold ATX |
Mouse | Roccat Kone Pro Air |
Keyboard | Cooler Master MasterKeys Pro L |
Software | Windows 10 64-bit Home Edition |
A CPU-Z screenshot has been shared by YuuKi_AnS—the image contains details about an alleged next-gen Intel Xeon Scalable processor engineering sample (ES). The hardware tipster noted in (yesterday's post) that an error had occurred in the application's identification of this chunk of prototype silicon. CPU-Z v2.09 has recognized the basics—an Intel Granite Rapids-SP processor that is specced with 80 cores, 2.5 GHz max frequency, a whopping 672 MB of L3 cache, and a max. TDP rating of 350 W. The counting of 320 threads seems to be CPU-Z's big mistake here—previous Granite Rapids-related leaks have not revealed Team Blue's Hyper-Threading technology producing such impressive numbers.
The alleged prototype status of this Xeon chip is very apparent in CPU-Z's tracking of single and multi-core performance—the benchmark results are really off the mark, when compared to finalized current-gen scores (produced by rival silicon). Team Blue's next-gen Xeon series is likely positioned to catch up with AMD EPYC's deployment of large core counts—"Granite Rapids" has been linked to the Intel 3 foundry node, reports from last month suggest that XCC-type processors could be configured with "counts going up to 56-core/112-threads." Micron is prepping next-gen "Tall Form Factor" memory modules, designed with future enterprise processor platforms in mind—including Intel's Xeon Scalable "Granite Rapids" family. Industry watchdogs posit that Team Blue will be launching this series in the coming months.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
The alleged prototype status of this Xeon chip is very apparent in CPU-Z's tracking of single and multi-core performance—the benchmark results are really off the mark, when compared to finalized current-gen scores (produced by rival silicon). Team Blue's next-gen Xeon series is likely positioned to catch up with AMD EPYC's deployment of large core counts—"Granite Rapids" has been linked to the Intel 3 foundry node, reports from last month suggest that XCC-type processors could be configured with "counts going up to 56-core/112-threads." Micron is prepping next-gen "Tall Form Factor" memory modules, designed with future enterprise processor platforms in mind—including Intel's Xeon Scalable "Granite Rapids" family. Industry watchdogs posit that Team Blue will be launching this series in the coming months.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source