Zen 5 Secrets Revealed - it's Gonna Be (Really) Good

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024

Комментарии • 393

  • @CharlesVanNoland
    @CharlesVanNoland Год назад +226

    I'm more interested to see if AMD can come back swinging w/ their GPU division like they did a few years ago w/ Ryzen in their CPU division.

    • @skywalker1991
      @skywalker1991 Год назад +1

      No point , people just buy nvidia , look at rtx3050 is 50% slower than rx6600 and people still bought more rtx3050 , same price , $250 .00 .
      Rtx3070 8gb sold more than entire rx6000 line up from amd , rtx3070 only 8 GB still $500.00 and rx6800xt 16gb is 40% faster same price now , still people buy gimped nvidia hardware .
      So no point competing .you can't fix dumb people .

    • @kintustis
      @kintustis Год назад +75

      No point. Nvidia has turned the gpu market into a software battle amd can't win. Gimmicks like physx and rtx in the gaming market, and cuda in the business and pro market. Amd can't dominate the market until they can tell devs what to code, and they can't tell devs what to code until they dominate the market.

    • @Bobis32
      @Bobis32 Год назад +36

      with what ive been hearing from game devs is they dont want to work with nvidia anymore because they are holding back on vram that they need alot of devs thought 8gb to only be on low end by now

    • @earthtaurus5515
      @earthtaurus5515 Год назад +41

      @@kintustis Well, Nvidia has shot off their own limbs by hamstringing the VRAM on their GPUs as low VRAM means no RTX at higher resolutions lol. The calculations for Raytracing and Physx have to reside somewhere and that's VRAM.

    • @kintustis
      @kintustis Год назад +11

      @@earthtaurus5515 Nvidia has been doing that for decades at this point. Clearly it works for them, and they don't need to change anything.

  • @WickedRibbon
    @WickedRibbon Год назад +300

    AMD's cpu division is astonishing. At this point, can we call their turnaround from Bulldozer to Zen 5 the greatest recovery we've ever seen from a tech company?
    From near bankruptcy in 2014, to not only catching up with a dominant Intel, but have them scrambling into massive company restructures, just to compete.
    I don't know if there's a CEO Hall of Fame, but Lisa Su should be a first class inductee.

    • @NeilBooth
      @NeilBooth Год назад +16

      Ok but that is thanks to previous management, tape out time was like 5 years for Zen 1 check your history

    • @AnotherLotte
      @AnotherLotte Год назад +57

      @@NeilBooth Yeah, while I appreciate what Lisa Su has done to manage the launch and subsequent launches of future Zen products, I really believe that Rory Read deserves a bit more acknowledgement for being able to keep AMD afloat post-Bulldozer.

    • @WillFuI
      @WillFuI Год назад +4

      Amd’s most recent CEO’s deserve that recognition. Lisa has done and amazing job keeping them focused on the prize

    • @WickedRibbon
      @WickedRibbon Год назад +7

      @@AnotherLotte Rory Read is a new name to me. Sounds like I should read deeper on AMD's history.

    • @SnowmanTF2
      @SnowmanTF2 Год назад +9

      At least recently, but it is in the same ballpark of Apple on the verge of bankruptcy in the 90s, which was bailed out by Microsoft in it's darkest hour to avoid legal issues from going from an effective monopoly to a clear one without even a visible competitor in the consumer market. To not only growing past Microsoft's stock value in around a decade, but maintaining a strong position for decades now.

  • @WSS_the_OG
    @WSS_the_OG Год назад +85

    This shows the effect of solid competition, where the two combatants trade blows. The general purpose CPU market is healthy. This is sorely needed in the GPU space.

    • @gamingtemplar9893
      @gamingtemplar9893 Год назад +10

      Well.... not that much competition nor healthy, that would require 10 or 100 companies, we are used to a corporate not free market capitalism so people don't understand it as anything regarding economy, mostly. But it is true that AMD and Intel are competing somehow, that is something and better than nothing. And nothing is basically the PC GPU market, since is in fact and practice, a Nvidia monopoly. AMD has no problem with this since AMD has console "monopoly". This is to me a deal between AMD and Nvidia, and besides what normal people think, these things are normal, corporations do not want competition, they prefer high taxes and regulations than having to compete with other companies and this is why they exist in the first place, also AMD is in a deal with some governments including US.

    • @DebasedAnon
      @DebasedAnon Год назад +5

      ​@@gamingtemplar9893This exactly.
      People will whine about "free markets creating monopolies" (or in this case duopolies) but the second you dig into any of them you'll find a mountain of unnecessary regulations, giant piles of money from government subsidising and massive amounts spent on lobbying for politicians that are gung-ho about increasing taxes and the previously mentioned regulations further.

    • @onomatopoeia162003
      @onomatopoeia162003 Год назад +2

      @@gamingtemplar9893 why personally I am for enforcing anti-trust here in the US

    • @mommaduck79
      @mommaduck79 Год назад +8

      @@gamingtemplar9893 bruh the fact that you think the poor GPU market is due to ‘regulations’ and ‘not free market capitalism’ is absolutely ridiculous. I don’t know what kind of logic you’re using to suggest that the lack of competition is due to too much regulation. That’s absurd.

    • @Perlereino.
      @Perlereino. Год назад +4

      @@mommaduck79 Real capitalism has never been tried! If we had real capitalism it would be amazing! - That dude, probably.

  • @Navie.
    @Navie. Год назад +73

    i remember when intel were selling the i7-6900K for 1k usd at retail 1k for a 8/16 thread cpu intel deserves all the beating they get I am here for it

    • @filipealves6602
      @filipealves6602 Год назад +28

      And a whopping $1700 for the 10C/20T 6950K!!! Only 70% more for the privilege of two extra Intel cores!!! 😂

    • @shepardpolska
      @shepardpolska Год назад +7

      @@filipealves6602 Lets not forget the crazy improvement of i7-7700k over i7-6700k. 10% faster clock.

    • @filipealves6602
      @filipealves6602 Год назад +10

      @@shepardpolska irrelevant. The 7700K was the only decent product from the 7000 series (maybe the non-K as well), but all others had poor performance and terrible value.

    • @shepardpolska
      @shepardpolska Год назад +7

      @@filipealves6602 Sorry? 7700k is practically 6700k with a higher clock. You were better off buying cheaper skylake CPUs Benchmarks from the time show the 7700k being like 7% faster on avarage and like 3% faster in games over the 6700k

    • @bhume7535
      @bhume7535 Год назад +2

      @@filipealves6602 Wrong. The Pentium G4560 added Hyperthreading to the pentiums and made i3s irrelevant at the time. Shit was fucking awesome back then.

  • @benjaminoechsli1941
    @benjaminoechsli1941 Год назад +53

    Ep(y)c. The fact that both AMD and Intel are both about to have one of their best uplifts in a decade is very exciting.

    • @2intheampm512
      @2intheampm512 Год назад +10

      ​@Steve Sherman No. Maybe the price will increase but nowhere near to what's happened to GPUs. Both Intel and AMD are competitive in x86, with multiple platform choices being viable as CPU uplifts are not even close to as big as GPUs gen to gen.

    • @TheHalo294
      @TheHalo294 Год назад +12

      i remeber the times when intel was dominating and offering those

  • @dex6316
    @dex6316 Год назад +79

    Excellent video as usual, always love these clarifying analyses.
    The l2$ being able to be tripled at no latency cost is huge. The reason why Intel and AMD have been sparing with cache sizes is because in an increase in size is in an increase in latency. I’m sure that if they didn’t have latency penalties they would grow the cache even at the cost of die increases. We know that data center loves more l2$ from Intel always having a bigger l2$ since Skylake-X. We also know that gaming loves more cache.
    Since AMD uses the same dues for data center and consumer, they will certainly implement this in the coming years. We know from both AMD and Intel that they can easily incorporate a cache size increase in as little as a year, so perhaps a Zen 5+ in 2024 to go against Arrow Lake. A Zen 6 in 2024 doesn’t seem impossible, but AMD likes to wait more than a year to bring out a new micro architecture.
    The ladder interconnect is certainly interesting, but probably not that consequential. Ring buses have excellent performance for 8 cores. It is definitely going to be consequential for Zen 5c because those 16 cores will get excellent latency enhancements. For Zen 5 I would expect no more than 1-2%, and probably negligible enhancements from the switch alone.

    • @DeltaSierra426
      @DeltaSierra426 Год назад

      An increase is size usually means taking up more die space as well. Less circuits for execution will take down performance, so it's very much an art (science) of utilizing die space with maximum efficiency (or effectiveness, if you prefer).

  • @z1mt0n1x2
    @z1mt0n1x2 Год назад +58

    From what I remember, Jim Keller was hired by AMD to design the ZEN architecture. It was a huge announcement during AMD's financial crisis in 2012, and his return to AMD was regarded as AMD's last stance in the industry. If ZEN failed AMD was done. In retrospect, Jim Keller saved AMD.
    So when you say he didn't work on ZEN5, which is true, but neither did he work with any other ZEN design but the first one. Keller was hired to make "ZEN" as a whole, ZEN 2, 3, 4, and 5 is all AMD tinkering with the design that Keller left behind.

    • @NadeemAhmed-nv2br
      @NadeemAhmed-nv2br Год назад +15

      You do know Zen 3 and 5 are both complete redesigns right

    • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Год назад +27

      @@NadeemAhmed-nv2br There's no such thing as a complete redesign. Everyone always takes what they already know works and assembles it in slightly improved ways.

    • @sefoi
      @sefoi Год назад +9

      @@rightwingsafetysquad9872 Actually , Jim Keller himself talks in interviews that every 5 years companies tha design CPUs have to design something new.

    • @z1mt0n1x2
      @z1mt0n1x2 Год назад +3

      @@NadeemAhmed-nv2br not at all, they're both chiplets, and they both use infinity fabric. and if they were indeed complete redesigns, they wouldnt call them ZEN.
      but if you're an individual who works at AMD, you can prove me wrong right?

    • @RobBCactive
      @RobBCactive Год назад +11

      Jim's interview with Dr Cutress made it clear he was putting the team together and managing, it's really Michael Clarke also interviewed by Dr Cutress who was the architect of Zen.

  • @GeoStreber
    @GeoStreber Год назад +65

    If they increase L2 to 3MB/core, they'll stack all L3 by default. Mark my words.

    • @emp.splash
      @emp.splash Год назад +16

      Makes sense. Otherwise, that chiplet would balloon in size. And AMD is really particular about core size, and chiplet size by extension. Will be curious to see if they decide to segment their products based on L2 cache size in the future.

    • @KarrasBastomi
      @KarrasBastomi Год назад +6

      That's in my mind too! 16 core CCD stacked on top of 128 MB of L3$!

    • @GeoStreber
      @GeoStreber Год назад

      @@KarrasBastomi could be for Zen 5c, but for Zen 5, we only get 8 cores per CCD. I expect the cores to be much wider than before though.

    • @lukabozic5
      @lukabozic5 Год назад

      @@GeoStreber He talks about Zen6 and beyond

  • @interlace84
    @interlace84 Год назад +35

    Can't be the only one out there still perfectly happy with their Zen3-rigs until they really can't no more.. which should still be a pretty while off ☺
    Meanwhile those major IPC bumps and multiplying corecounts ahead should make plenty look forward to whenever that day comes already 👍 thanks for the video!

    • @yottaXT
      @yottaXT Год назад +6

      I'm rocking my 5950x, and looking how the things are panning out my next upgrade by 2026 is gonna be full AMD too. We're living interesting times.

    • @truckerallikatuk
      @truckerallikatuk Год назад +3

      R7 5800x3d here, loving it. Should keep my rig going quite happily for a few years to come.

    • @tobiassteindl2308
      @tobiassteindl2308 Год назад +2

      Zen 2 here (3700x), can't complain

    • @Knirin
      @Knirin Год назад +1

      I recently upgraded from an R7 2700x to an R9 5900x. Damn that upgrade is very, very noticeable.

    • @edmac1090
      @edmac1090 Год назад

      Zen 3000 and 5000 will be competitive until the consoles refresh, at least. What the PS6 and Xbox Series Y (or whatever) use will determine what specs you need to aim for.

  • @unclerubo
    @unclerubo Год назад +7

    Zen 5 should arrive right about when I finish my car payments, heralding my biggest CPU upgrade since I moved from a Core2quad Q9550 to a Core i7 5820K :D

  • @JohnnyWednesday
    @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +1

    Nice to hear you're friendly with Tom - he's a nice guy!

  • @adi6293
    @adi6293 Год назад +10

    Why is this video only half the acceptable length Jim? 😜

  • @Loundsify
    @Loundsify Год назад +3

    "Alright guys" man i missed Jim. Looking forward to this one.

  • @teaser6089
    @teaser6089 Год назад +4

    Ah it's a great start of my spring Holliday when Jim uploads!

  • @Accuaro
    @Accuaro Год назад +9

    Jeez. AMD really going for Intel's jugular, and they're not letting go. Thanks for the tech update Jim, wonderful as always.

  • @raptor6600gt
    @raptor6600gt Год назад +15

    32 cores on AM5 would be very nice to see.

    • @martinrasmussen6634
      @martinrasmussen6634 Год назад +1

      There was a leak, i think it was by Moores Law is Dead, that said that we wouldn't get 16 core chiplets (aka zen5D/C), on desktop, for desktop. Sadly it seems for zen5, that we have to surffice with 16 core, again, max.... Unless they do more than 2 chiplet pr desktop cpu... Zen6 would get Zen6D/C for desktop, supposely, though... (all rumours, so take it with a grain of salt)

    • @Knirin
      @Knirin Год назад +1

      AM5 doesn’t have enough PCIe lanes or memory bandwidth to keep 32 cores fed.

    • @martinrasmussen6634
      @martinrasmussen6634 Год назад +1

      @Thomas B by the time zen6 comes, it will be down to 2 or 3nm processing, vs the current 5nm. Of cause tripling the l2 cache will cost some more in power, but im sure its doable without hitting Intel max tdp of 250watts ;)

    • @onomatopoeia162003
      @onomatopoeia162003 Год назад +1

      Then wait for a refresh on threadripper, etc.

    • @martinrasmussen6634
      @martinrasmussen6634 Год назад

      @@onomatopoeia162003 Threadripper does not utilize AM5, nor AM4 socket

  • @TheExard3k
    @TheExard3k Год назад +2

    Linux Kernel now scales with more than 256 threads (still a mess in htop), so just keep the cores coming.

  • @InviktusRex
    @InviktusRex Год назад +8

    It's always a good day when Adored puts out a new analysis video

  • @lamhkak47
    @lamhkak47 Год назад +18

    Can't wait for the Strix Halo, for all the MacBook tier integrated experience, and that Novideo pulling the GPU chips a tier down on mobile.

    • @johns.1898
      @johns.1898 Год назад +1

      They've ALWAYS done this

    • @redstonerti9918
      @redstonerti9918 Год назад +1

      Honestly, even as someone that doesn't use a laptop that often, I am really excited about it. It opens up a whole new world of possibilities with laptops, and may even turn me into a laptop user lmao. I have a 10708GB and a 7700x, and this 28W cpu will have more cpu and gpu performance than my whole Full sized tower.

    • @lamhkak47
      @lamhkak47 Год назад

      @@johns.1898 Counterpoint (not really), Pascal, Turing and Ampere's 3060 (ironic).
      Though, the 40 series laptop chips are real bad, literally a tier lower for any chip 4060 and beyond, instead of downclocked ones like those I mentioned in those not-really-counterpoint.

  • @mikeb3172
    @mikeb3172 Год назад +2

    A large L4 cache shared between CPU, iGPU would test AMD's APUs

  • @senhorkorracha
    @senhorkorracha Год назад +3

    LMFAO the thought of manufactures trying to avoid benchmarks by shoving as many cores and threads as possible so that the benchmarks fail to grasp the full power is hilarious to me

  • @truckerallikatuk
    @truckerallikatuk Год назад +13

    I disagree with the claim "Phenom was awful"... Phenom II was very competitive with Core2 duo and quad, and still a decent option vs Clarkdale and low end Lynnfield chips. When Sandy Bridge came out, it was left in the dust like everything else. It was just that AMD's next big thing was very late to market and had a wildly optimistic design that went in the wrong direction entirely.

    • @SirMo
      @SirMo Год назад +6

      Yeah Phenom II was by no means awful. It was the last good AMD architecture before Zen came out.

    • @TrueThanny
      @TrueThanny Год назад +3

      Definitely not awful, but still quite a bit behind even Bloomfield (the first Nehalem processors).
      I moved from a Phenom II 955 to an i7 950 back then, and did some gaming benchmark tests before and after. In very CPU-limited settings, the i7 950 was 40%+ faster than the Phenom II 955. That's with the former at 3.69GHz and the latter at 3.6GHz, so almost the same clock speed.
      At the time, I had a 5970 and mostly played at 2560x1600, and there were still many CPU-limited scenarios at that resolution. For example, one of my old tested games was _Dirt 2._ At 2560x1600, highest settings, and 4xAA, the i7 950's average frame rate was 114, while the Phenom II 955's was 80. _Company of Heroes,_ also with highest settings and 4xAA, was much heavier on the GPU, but still showed a 14% advantage for the i7 (138fps vs 121fps).
      So while the Phenom II was a good CPU, it was still considerably outclassed by Nehalem. And then came Bulldozer, meaning AMD wasn't a viable option for years.

    • @gamingtemplar9893
      @gamingtemplar9893 Год назад +1

      I remember and both Phenom were behind, and then it became just worse. Sure, they were cheaper too.....and even more cheap the "Athlon" ones, in fact, one interesting thing about those cpus was that you could buy a dual core phenom or athlon II, and activate the other 2 cores, insane, we don't have these things anymore.

    • @Knirin
      @Knirin Год назад +1

      The Phenom II could trade blows with most of Intel’s lineup when it came out in everything except AVX workloads and random memory latency. It still does better than my I5-6500 in everything except gaming.
      You would think 20ns versus 68ns in RAM latency for a random address would hurt the Phenom II but apparently it doesn’t in most tasks. I have no explanation for that.

    • @3800S1
      @3800S1 Год назад +2

      Phenom 1 was awful, but Phenom 2 was pretty damn good. I had both when they were new. Phenom 1's biggest let down was it's woeful clocks and 0 ability to OC. I couldn't even get 100Mhz out of any Phenom 1 chips back in the day, but my Phenom 2 chips had way higher stock clocks and could clock typically 600-1000Mhz more than stock with a conservative OC.
      Then bulldozer and related gen came out, I agree they were shite for the lower end stuff, being slower than Phenom 2 in most cases, but the late higher end Bulldozer family chips were actually a good step faster than Phenom 2. I got given a 8320 and I replaced my Phenom 2 X945 and it was a lot quicker in general and gaming too. Over the years as windows got better, the old faildozer got faster and aged less than even intel at the time and left Phenom 2 in the dust. My main system is still the 8320 and is snappier than my zen+ or zen2? work laptop but I put most of that down to win 10 being a much slower OS for general tasks than win 7 is.

  • @MobileIndifference
    @MobileIndifference 2 месяца назад +3

    You Got the layout stuff right!

  • @jannegrey593
    @jannegrey593 Год назад +2

    If I remember correctly in one of his first videos on YT, Dr. Ian Cuttress (TechTechPotato) paid you an homage in expanding on the idea in your videos on "Interposers and butterdonuts". In it he also claimed (IIRC) that they did check and ask AMD about L3 in Zen 3 and that according to AMD it wasn't exactly a bi-directional ringbus, but something that acted like it for 8 cores. Though apparently back then they still didn't have an idea what exactly to do in the future to scale it up.
    But this was one of the biggest obstacles in creating 16 cores CCX. It seems that now they will only make L3 smaller, with Vcache being substitute and perhaps in the next one they will get rid of L3 on the die completely and will use only Vcache as a source of L3. It's not penalty free, but it might be better than either connecting through Infinity Fabric or some other thing like mesh topology. Which technically scales better that ringbus, but it's still not fantastic for the numbers we're talking about.

  • @pham3383
    @pham3383 Год назад +3

    im still here pumpung 144fps on 2k with 5800x3d

  • @jtd8719
    @jtd8719 Год назад +1

    Love that butterdonuts are back in the discussion. Mmmmm, butter....donuts....

  • @TakedaKenshi
    @TakedaKenshi Год назад +3

    Intel / Wolverine crossover confirmed. Finally, Intel will be able to claw back its desktop performance crown.

    • @ArtisChronicles
      @ArtisChronicles Год назад

      Ok that's actually funny. I'd love to see some sort of collab because of the naming.

  • @ItsAkile
    @ItsAkile Год назад +8

    This is where my hype starts, for Intel responses as well. AMD's new trend in delivering beefier APUs can't be a coincident or just share RND expansion, Intel Tiles are coming too

    • @wahidpawana424
      @wahidpawana424 11 месяцев назад +1

      I can't wait for a time where we could ditch dedicated GPU as APU and continuous development of upscaling like FSR makes an improvement.

    • @ItsAkile
      @ItsAkile 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah 100%, dGPU still will be useful and wanted but I feel like my needs are met on the mid-end unless I want to do some Ray Tracing in games and that'll get even better with time @@wahidpawana424

  • @TM86880
    @TM86880 Год назад +2

    Thanks Jim, really looking forward to this Zen 5 launch, I really hope it's not all hype!

  • @anotherriddle
    @anotherriddle Год назад +2

    I wouldn't interpret too much into the Tenstorrent slide. Probably Jim Keller made a well educated guess and maybe picked the higher end of likely IPC increase because he wanted to have a best/worst case comparison to dedicated machine learning hardware. The way these kind of slides are presented in the industry he probably didn't think that much about the labeling until someone prompted him for a clarification/correction.
    The big L2 cache is interesting. Maybe the engineers at AMD made a chip at the upper end of what is possible to better test and gauge the performance implications of cache size. The end product might use the amount that AMD found as the best compromise.

  • @NBWDOUGHBOY
    @NBWDOUGHBOY Год назад +1

    War is good in this sense. They keep battling and We keep Winning as Consumers

  • @cracklingice
    @cracklingice Год назад +9

    I kinda miss those quad core days. When you bought 50% (or more) more cores than you needed, you at least got HEDT features. Now, you're stuck spending HEDT money on babies first socket (consumer parts) and if you want a fully featured enthusiast machine that starts at 2500 bucks for a 12 core, board and 64gb of overclocked registered ecc.

    • @dex6316
      @dex6316 Год назад +4

      The difference is that back then very few applications would even use 4 cores. The fact that a 4C4T part delivered maximum gaming performance means that games only needed like 3 cores with the fourth going to background tasks. Now games want 6 cores and there are many consumer applications that can use up to 16 cores.
      The mainstream has eaten into HEDT. The only difference is massive IO and even higher core counts. The core counts are only necessary for workstation applications, and with the death of multi-gpu the IO enhancements are unnecessary as well. An enthusiast just needs 16 lanes for the GPU and 4-8 lanes for SSDs. The mainstream also has gotten so much better IO since the old days.

    • @peterconnell2496
      @peterconnell2496 Год назад +4

      a $140 6 core AMD 3600 & a $100 am4 mobo is a fine gaming platform. I think you have a very flawed memory of the good old days.

    • @shepardpolska
      @shepardpolska Год назад +2

      The golden days where i7-7700k was 5-10% faster then the i7-6700k, and most of the improvement was higher clock speeds that you can get on the 6700k anyway without even raising the voltage.

    • @cracklingice
      @cracklingice Год назад

      @@dex6316 ​ @Dex There are very few applications that use more than 8 cores. There is no reason for 12 and 16 core parts on the consumer platform. Yet people are celebrating paying HEDT money for consumer hardware when a high end enthusiast system should have 40 to 48 PCIE lanes and quad channel memory.

    • @cracklingice
      @cracklingice Год назад +1

      @@peterconnell2496 The good old days was HEDT. Yeah, what you said is a fine budget gaming platform but I don't want a budget gaming platform, I want a high end enthusiast PC.

  • @mapesdhs597
    @mapesdhs597 Год назад +2

    The problem with CB and high thread counts is why presumably AMD decided to use C-ray way back (as your videos discussed, re my detailed explanation at the time), because it made for good PR, so it's interesting that AMD did not use C-Ray for later launches. Perhaps it's because C-Ray can't highlight gains from the likes of AVX, it's such a very simple and not exactly real-world test (it just looks good for PR because it scales so well).
    Wasn't there an article way back talking about a similar problem with an earlier version of CB? I forget where I read it now, but it was a similar notion, newer SKUs with a lot of threads weren't being exploited as well as they ought because of the limitations of CB at the time.

  • @jwest88
    @jwest88 Год назад +4

    I snapped up a bundle deal so am on AM5, X670 mobo. I am excited for these future architectures though; I will definitely buy the last gen of AM5 and slot it into my motherboard down the line. Just waiting on the GPU market to improve. So far everything this generation has been a pass. I am going to go radeon but am waiting for a more affordable option that far exceeds my gtx 1080.

  • @tomtomkowski7653
    @tomtomkowski7653 Год назад +16

    If only AMD would like to put the same effort into their Radeon division...
    But GPUs are responsible only for 3-5% of AMD's total revenue so they are quite irrelevant when compared to their CPU division where they can sell their products on both (private consumer and enterprise) markets and they also have Instinct, not to mention consoles market.

    • @Tigrou7777
      @Tigrou7777 Год назад +1

      I agree. But it seems making GPUs is a totally different story than making CPUs. Look at Intel (making top tier CPUs) : their Arc it's not bad but well behind the green and red team.

    • @SirMo
      @SirMo Год назад +4

      They are putting a lot of effort in the GPU division tbh. The chiplet design is by no means an easy task. It's not delivering full benefits yet, but these major paradigm shifts take some time to perfect. Zen1 was not an outright win either. It took Zen2 and Zen3 to really cement AMD as a leader in CPUs.

    • @edmac1090
      @edmac1090 Год назад

      @@SirMo zen 3 was what did it. Zen 2 was a blow to Intel for sure, but Zen 3 was a knockout punch. I’m hoping Radeon 8000 can iron out the kinks, but I don’t expect significant damage to Nvidia until 9000.

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад

      Such a ridiculous sentiment

    • @tomtomkowski7653
      @tomtomkowski7653 Год назад

      @@RyTrapp0 Maybe watch the previous AdoredTV video where he has quite the same thoughts about AMD.

  • @Bobis32
    @Bobis32 Год назад +6

    this is what ive been wanting to see for years true competition, and amd is slowly catching nvidia on performance and software amd vs 2 giants 2024 and 2025 are looking interesting for pc hardware

  • @sacamentobob
    @sacamentobob Год назад +1

    hey, I had both a Phenom and a Bulldozer. I had the legendary 960T and I also had the 8320 - the 8320 was actually v good in windows vs my 4790k, which I found lacking in windows (but obviously made up phenomenally in Games).

    • @sacamentobob
      @sacamentobob Год назад

      @@OverbiteGamesthose mobile A series processors were dreadful!

  • @TheEVEInspiration
    @TheEVEInspiration Год назад +2

    3DVcache won't matter all that much when L2 cache gets much bigger.
    It still will do something, but not nearly as much as before.
    As such I expect L3 cache sizes to go down if they enlarge the L2.
    Would be interesting to see if they slowly evolve to the virtual L3 that IBM did.
    Where Really Large L2 per core, together also acts as shared L3.

    • @highdefinist9697
      @highdefinist9697 Год назад +2

      Not really, they have very different performance characteristics. Some games (and other applications) would benefit immensely from a larger L2 cache, just like some games are benefiting immensely from a larger L3 cache, but it really depends on the memory access pattern of the game or application.

  • @blkspade23
    @blkspade23 Год назад

    I think Keller's ability to "estimate" is likely from his existing intimate knowledge of the architecture. He probably worked out future projections long before he left.

  • @MasterMindWC
    @MasterMindWC Год назад +1

    I just bought the 7800X3D and a 6750XT with AMD Expo 6000mhz RAM. Going to gave a bit of fun after waiting 13 years to buy a new computer.

    • @SirMo
      @SirMo Год назад

      That computer will last you a long time. Enjoy!

  • @MrAdhiSuryana
    @MrAdhiSuryana Год назад +1

    Pls make video about Ryzen Z1 and future Srix Point
    It looks like they are ready to make a bold push against Apple M series mobile

  • @AnIdiotAboard_
    @AnIdiotAboard_ Год назад +1

    Video aint played yet, but this had better fucking start with Alright guys hows it going, cos i sure as shit miss your breakdowns and videos.

    • @AnIdiotAboard_
      @AnIdiotAboard_ Год назад

      YESHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

  • @craigjoe8691
    @craigjoe8691 Год назад +1

    This is why I went with a 7800X3D instead of the dead 13900k. I can slot in a new CPU to my motherboard, instead of having to buy an all new one as with 13900k.

  • @MeisterMitBart
    @MeisterMitBart Год назад +1

    if you talk about the Moores Law video for half the time, please put the link in the description, would be greatly appreciated (at least by me)

  • @shanent5793
    @shanent5793 Год назад

    The ladder looks like a mesh with three additional horizontal ways. What do they represent? Is there an additional vertical node between the cores?

  • @rick_takahashi
    @rick_takahashi Год назад +2

    Jim, it's like 3am here... OMG... I'll just hit like and watch this later. Thanks!

  • @Wh0am131
    @Wh0am131 Год назад +4

    Wonder with this increase in L2 cache and intel doing what they are with L4 if AMD either in zen 5 or zen 6 will just have vcache as the standard going forward?

  • @j.w.s.743
    @j.w.s.743 Год назад

    Love this channel ❤️. Been away for awhile but saw one of the videos by chance and realized how much I missed it!

  • @B-KARIM
    @B-KARIM Год назад +5

    Nice one Jim ^^
    Was waiting for this one ^^
    Intel should worry? Any news on the zen 5's intel counterpart? 14X00k?

    • @GeoStreber
      @GeoStreber Год назад +1

      As far as is currently known, Intel 14X00k is cancelled on the desktop.

    • @dex6316
      @dex6316 Год назад +2

      13th generation’s Raptor Lake will be refreshed into Raptor Lake refresh. Whether that’s 13th generation or 14th generation is yet to be seen.
      2024 is likely to use Meteor Lake up to the i5. That’s a 6+8 design using Redwood Cove and Crestmont for a 15-25% IPC gain. The i7s and i9s will utilize Arrow Lake in an 8+16 design. Lion Cove is another 20%+ IPC gain over Redwood Cove and Skymont is expected to be a proper micro architectural enhancement as well. I think there is a decent chance a 6+8 14600K based on Arrow Lake will exist. Lion Cove will definitely beat Zen 5 in IPC, and possibly Zen 6 as well.

    • @B-KARIM
      @B-KARIM Год назад

      @@dex6316 very interesting!!
      Any sources where i can read more?

    • @dex6316
      @dex6316 Год назад

      @@B-KARIM Tom from the Moore’s Law is Dead RUclips channel has a few leaks discussing this very topic. Check out his videos.

    • @tstager1978
      @tstager1978 Год назад

      @@dex6316 The Intel fanboy has arrived!

  • @Woot-Zee
    @Woot-Zee Год назад +5

    oooh, Raja is on Risc-V... OK, 1-2 more years and Tenstorrent Risc-V will be dead.

    • @tringuyen7519
      @tringuyen7519 Год назад +2

      No, Jim will fire Raja in 2 years. RISC-V is a fantastic. Nvidia Grace using ARM cannot come close to AMD Epyc or Tenstorrent.

  • @adiffkindofswag1148
    @adiffkindofswag1148 Год назад +2

    I believe Zen 5 will be a massive IPC jump for AMD and will likely tie or narrowly beat MTL in ST IPC. The problem is MTL was a delayed project and ARL is already being loaded into the cylinder to shoot right after MTL clears the chamber. That will be 20% IPC for MTL (6 wide Redwood Cove) and another 25%+ IPC for ARL (8 wide Lion Cove) .

    • @Lemard77
      @Lemard77 Год назад +1

      Arrowlake will be a big challenge for AMD in the desktop yeah.

    • @CrownedFalcon00
      @CrownedFalcon00 Год назад +2

      Keep on mind that AMD has lots of performance levers they can pull to increase performance. AMD probably narrowly wins against MTL and narrowly lose vs ARL if they pull all the stops. It's still good for consumers to have them leapfrogging each other like this!

    • @shepardpolska
      @shepardpolska 7 месяцев назад

      This aged poorly, since MTL is a IPC regression. It gets like, 5-10% worse IPC then RPL

    • @adiffkindofswag1148
      @adiffkindofswag1148 7 месяцев назад

      @@shepardpolska actually it doesn't. But keep believing Moore's Law is Dumb. IPC is flat but it is much more efficient overall.

  • @orangeduck474
    @orangeduck474 Год назад +1

    A new Jim video. Sweet, always look forward to your content.
    Edit: Watched the video, it's so exciting to see innovation again. So glad AMD constantly pushing the envelope since we consumers benefit.

  • @FellTheSky
    @FellTheSky 9 дней назад

    It turned out it is amazing, just not for consumers.
    Amazon, Google, Facebook, they all love these zen 5 chips.
    Consumers get about 3-5% uplift

  • @mariolis
    @mariolis Год назад

    Its a no brainer ... go with the safe 4nm option while easilly pulling 20% IPC and if they try they can get to 30%
    Wait for 3nm to mature and release Zen6 on that , do a minimal IPC increase but double the cores and make IPC the focus of Zen7

  • @crazybeatrice4555
    @crazybeatrice4555 Год назад +3

    I tried to like the MLID video in the video and ended up just pausing it.

  • @TrueThanny
    @TrueThanny Год назад

    I'm by no means sure, but I don't think Cinebench uses CPU affinity. I think it simply has a hard-coded rendering thread limit, and creates only up to 256. I believe it lets the OS schedule them, which means it's only doubling up on physical cores when the thread count exceeds the core count.

  • @stephanhart9941
    @stephanhart9941 Год назад +3

    Imagine Intel actually got "Adamantium" to fab chips with!!! You could push unlimited voltage through it because once fabbed it's indestructible!
    I suppose Adamantine will have to do though. Plus paying royalties to Marvel comics on every chip sold is probably not too attractive to Intel.

    • @dex6316
      @dex6316 Год назад

      @Steve ShermanMore like:
      Intel 1: Hey AMD has this really cool 'V-Cache' technology that extends their l3$. They are beating us in gaming because of it.
      Intel 2: Hey that sounds like our old Crystal Well cache implementation. Why don't we take that and make it bigger and faster on a smaller node?
      Intel 1: That sounds like a great project. We can either die stack it like Lakefield or keep it on package like Crystal Well. Any ideas for names?
      Intel 2: Uhh... I don't know... Adamantine I guess...

  • @niks660097
    @niks660097 Год назад +1

    14:44 L2 cache increase is useless unless TLB and other buffer sizes are increased too, to make use of L2 by prefetching from RAM, anandtech low level CPU reviews have found multiple times that doubling L2 cache improves IPC by 2.5% only, biggest update about zen 5 is going 5 - wide or 6 - wide to finally match beat everyone in the market(including ARM) for IPC crown..

    • @portman8909
      @portman8909 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think I'll wait for Zen with V cache. I may as well buy a 7800x3d instead of a 8700 by the sounds of it.

    • @niks660097
      @niks660097 10 месяцев назад

      @@portman8909 i would say go for it, that 96MB L3 cache will probably won't be obsolete in next 10 years, intel's strategy of increasing L2 is kill their efficiency without much performance increase..

  • @igavinwood
    @igavinwood Год назад +2

    As always Jim, you drop something interesting for the tech space. You started the vid mentioning AI. From everything I've heard nVidia are looking to use this as their new cash cow for their GPUs, I believe that will make a difference for the consumer GPU market, but what interests me is what AMD are doing with their consumer based CPUs and GPUs. They are the only tech company that produces both CPU and GPU. Currently it looks like they'll kill off entry level GPUs with their APUs, but where is the GPU market going and how much of what we see in Zen5 will drop into graphics?

    • @Beos_Valrah
      @Beos_Valrah Год назад +2

      _"They are the only tech company that produces both CPU and GPU."_
      Um, did you forget intel?

  • @minus3dbintheteens60
    @minus3dbintheteens60 Год назад

    I'm not getting excited about expensive chips with excessive L2 again, not after spending a huge amount ($600usd) on a 4400+ x2 (the cheapest double cache model) Toledo back in 2005-2006, it was over a thousand dollars (usd) for a 4800+ x2! Ryan Shrout at PC Perspective did a great review on the 4400+ and actually got the cache amounts right which seemed impossible for most internet pages to get right, but I must have had more money than sense, I realised that soon after buying it, sold it, bought my first laptop, a core 2 with MXM gpu, zero regrets

  • @ADB-zf5zr
    @ADB-zf5zr Год назад

    IMHO, the "Ladder" is simply multi-die stacking, how many runs do you want to climb.? 0, 1, 2, 3... Now multiply by the "default" (L3) cache arrangement 16, 32, 48, 64. Or perhaps 32, 64, 96, 128.!

  • @ChrispyNut
    @ChrispyNut Год назад +7

    Increase cache size/speed is one of the oldest ways to gain performance, but it's also one of the most costly. With these constant increases across the board, it [for me] really highlights the struggles they're having to increase performance.

    • @VoldoronGaming
      @VoldoronGaming Год назад +1

      I would say performance is mostly a software problem these days now. Look at how terrible the new Star Wars game runs on pc even with a 4090 vs consoles

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Год назад +1

      @@VoldoronGaming Wait, that's an EA release. Should be pleased to get a game at all for your money, typically it's just spit o your face (hence I've not given them money for at least several years)

  • @Gargantura
    @Gargantura Год назад

    Its Gonna Be (Expensive) Really Good

  • @HEAD123456
    @HEAD123456 Год назад +4

    I just want them to increase core count finally in desktop.
    I am sick of R5 6core and R7 8core since zen1. Meanwhile Intel increasing core count in core i5/i7 like crazy.
    I want from zen5 R5 8core for 250, R7 12core for 350 and R9 16core for 550usd or i wont buy it.
    Intel went from i5 6core/6 threads to 14cores/20threads meanwhile AMD still trying sell 6core/12 threads for 300usd since zen1😂

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад

      I'm sick of having all these cores & threads and basically no benefit from them if I'm not doing some kind of heavy work. A 5950x doesn't do a damn thing for me over a 6/12 when you have to go out of your way to find software to actually put a real load on the damn thing.

    • @csollermoller
      @csollermoller Год назад +1

      Intel went from 10 to 8, you use small cores interchangeably. Sorry this comment is false.

  • @wesmids04lo41
    @wesmids04lo41 Год назад

    Your topic always an eye opener. ❤❤❤

  • @micThurrr
    @micThurrr Год назад

    Ladder bus would be worse than a bifurcated ring bus on 8 core chiplet.

  • @wewillrockyou1986
    @wewillrockyou1986 Год назад

    AMD L2 cache is exclusive to the CPUs, it can't be accessed by other CPU cores, so if the performance is up so much in MT but not up at all in ST it will be down to how it interacts with SMT or how it alleviates the load on the L3.

  • @juniorjunior8494
    @juniorjunior8494 Год назад +1

    Great video, I don't think 3nm will give AMD any advantage over intel, it sounds controversial but here's why - Recent reports suggest TSMC struggling with 3nm capacity and volume ramp to meet Apple demand (remember intel is ahead of the queue next to Apple for 3nm wafer capacity at TSMC). So when Zen 5c comes out, probably late 2024, it will be in limited quantities to make a dent in anything, and intel will be prepping 18A ramp. If Zen 5 is to win, AMD has to do it on 4nm and make it impressive vs intel 3 products. I expect them to trade blows and i expect intel to break ahead as expected with 18A

    • @juniorjunior8494
      @juniorjunior8494 Год назад

      That's on server side, on client side will be similar intel will use either 20A or TSMC 3nm or both for Arrow Lake & Lunar Lake

  • @adhahanif9792
    @adhahanif9792 Год назад

    I hate when people mocking over bulldozer. Yes, performance is terrible but it's fundamental for the design of Zen arch. Remember sharing resources? They doing it now but at better result.

  • @lbegert
    @lbegert Год назад +1

    As always, quality and super interesting content!

  • @portman8909
    @portman8909 10 месяцев назад +1

    I doubt Zen 5 will be much better than 7800x3d. Maybe wait for Zen 5 with v cache?

  • @sehichanders7020
    @sehichanders7020 Год назад

    Memory is moving more and more and closer and closer to the CPU. I wouldn't be surprised if in a few years what we now call "L4" is big enough to actually run complete Operating Systems plus applications, and CPUs start "swapping" to RAM, so to speak. Intel did something relatively similar with Knights Landing before, just that there L4 was actually HBM. 3DVC and ADM are both steps to move this type of memory completely into the CPU. This kind of topology doesn't only provide much lower latency for memory access, but, and that's probably the more important factor, saves massive amounts of power.

    • @kingkrrrraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa4527
      @kingkrrrraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa4527 Год назад

      I think we might see what Apple has done and put the Ram onto the package right next to the SOC.
      Which could be the end for upgrading your memory unless you buy a server, workstation or a super expensive "High End" motherboard that will still let you add in additional memory.

  • @truefan1367
    @truefan1367 Год назад +1

    Only 18 minutes Jim? Unacceptable!

  • @redpriest26
    @redpriest26 Год назад +1

    I don't see why they would produce these in hardware if they didn't plan to productize. They've been able to simulate with pretty good correlation larger caches for decades

    • @benjaminlynch9958
      @benjaminlynch9958 Год назад

      It’s a safe bet that the R&D chips don’t contain just one or two changes from ‘base’ designs. There’s a whole bunch of other things they’re testing that weren’t in this leak (some of which will never see the light of day).

  • @adi6293
    @adi6293 Год назад +1

    I just today received my 7800X3D so I'm sorted for a while but if AM5 does have the same support AM4 had a 16 Core Ryzen 7 9800X3D should be a nice upgrade in few years 😁😁

  • @absolute___zero
    @absolute___zero Год назад

    did you guys know that if superconductivity materials are used in a chip, a speeds of 770 Gigahertz can be achieved? Now you can only imagine how an extraterrestrial civilization can laugh about your 15% IPC increase and your 5Ghz+ speeds

  • @Dysphoricsmile
    @Dysphoricsmile Год назад

    Love the video as usual Jim!

  • @user-ph6vv6zu7u
    @user-ph6vv6zu7u Год назад

    Thx for making the vid, Jim!

  • @OldManBryan
    @OldManBryan Год назад +1

    Good, can't wait for it in laptops. Gives me some solace since nvidia laptop GPUs this gen are a straight scam and AMD is non-existent in laptops (besides the fact that seemingly 7000 series GPUs are bug out in VR) It makes waiting for the next generation of laptops seem worth it.

  • @user-zh9kc7tw4n
    @user-zh9kc7tw4n Год назад

    Brilliant video! Thank you Jim

  • @matsv201
    @matsv201 Год назад +2

    That is greate... but as a private consumer.... I want more efficient gpu. I hardly use the cpu power I got

    • @klanas40
      @klanas40 Год назад

      Better to create gaming APU at this point.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад

      @@klanas40 yea. Absolutly. With something like a zen 5 you can peobobly note use more than 2 or 3watt of cpu performance anyway

  • @bjarnedevos5891
    @bjarnedevos5891 Год назад +1

    If it does not burn into your motherboard because you put expo on xD

  • @Antagon666
    @Antagon666 Год назад

    Wellp, I'm looking forward to it. Hopefully MB prices fall down and self igniting bugs will be fixed by then...

  • @RobAryeeArc
    @RobAryeeArc Год назад

    Mmmm butterdonuts.
    PS Thanks Jim.

  • @kmputertechsupplies2374
    @kmputertechsupplies2374 Год назад

    All these Alright guys, I wonder Jim is really back or is it AI doing a voice mod on a script :D

  • @zodwraith5745
    @zodwraith5745 Год назад +2

    I'll believe it when I see it. If AMD is consistent in one thing it's being their own biggest fanboys and leaking the most optimistic numbers and often not meeting them. Let's not so quickly forget RDNA3.

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад

      "leaking the most optimistic numbers and often not meeting them" - put up or shut up. We're talking about Ryzen, not Radeon, they're literally completely different teams in the same company.

    • @zodwraith5745
      @zodwraith5745 Год назад

      @@RyTrapp0 Zen1 was great compared to the dumpster fire that was bulldozer. Zen+ fell short of expectations with single digit gains. Zen2 fell short of expectations with a 13-14% uplift when they claimed 20%. Zen3 met expectations with a 19% uplift when they claimed 20. Zen4 fell short of expectations with 21% when they claimed a whopping 29%. These are best case scenarios too when a lot of apps and games only saw mediocre gains. These are FACTS, not your fanboy "put up or shut up" bullshit.
      You need to remember it's their own people that keep leaking ridiculous gains which they never meet. I'm not saying they haven't had solid gains, they have. But they almost never meet the ridiculous claims they make based off cherry picked apps.
      I GUARANTEE Zen5 won't see a 30% performance uplift _across the board._ They'll cherry pick 1-2 apps they see huge gains in and marketing will run with it with their "UP TO" bullshit. If they're saying 30% I'd expect 19-20% tops in real world IPC gains.
      You need to remember MARKETING covers both Radeon and Zen. They just exaggerate laughably worse on Radeon.

  • @johndoh5182
    @johndoh5182 Год назад

    3MB is a LOT for L2 and I'm guessing the latency will be pretty high, so if AMD is trying to limit latency L2 will cap at 2MB/core.
    This is going to make it to where Vcache is less effective so at some point the only way I see Vcache parts is if AMD pushes ALL L3 to a stacked die which would give them a lot of real estate on a very expensive node such as TSMC N3 for more cores or possibly getting the memory controller off the CCD because THAT config seems to have a problem, and probably why 4 sticks of memory runs so slowly and even 2 sticks cap at about 6000mts.
    If they stack all L3 on an N3 node and slow clocks a little so heat isn't an issue, for one they could use something like TSMC N6 for the cache and save money and two it would give them more space for getting past an 8c/16t core for desktop and move to maybe an 8+8 config (big-little) or at least 8+4 where the little cores are their "C" cores which still use SMT and the full X86-64 ISA so that would get them to 24t/core chiplet and a total of 48 threads for Ryzen, and really, they need to get to that point as long as they get their memory issues worked out. Also, maybe instead of CCD to CCD comms going through the IOD, it should be a direct connect from one CCD to the other. That would also reduce latency.

    • @vigilant_1934
      @vigilant_1934 Год назад +1

      Did you stop the video or something? Jim literally wrote that AMD found that 2MB and 3MB L2 had NO LATENCY INCREASE. L2 cache will likely be limited to what's best for price to performance.
      As far as the memory controller and RAM speed limit, this is AMD's 1st gen of DDR5. Intel had the same issues with their 1st generation and AMD actually roughly matches 12th gen Intel as far as memory speeds and both have issues with 4 DIMMs which is a DDR5 thing). Zen 4 appears to be limited to 6400MT/s not 6000MT/s. Igor's Lab got 6400MT/s with multiple SK hynix and Samsung RAM kits on a 7950X back in October and Buildzoid reached DDR5-6200 CL26 on a 7600X more recently. Some AM5 motherboards are capable of DDR5-6600MT/s with 2 single rank DIMMs but not sure if anyone's reached that yet.

  • @mhh3
    @mhh3 Год назад

    AMD needs to do something about RTG, CPUs are good enough but they really need to work on GPUs more

  • @dino.techtv
    @dino.techtv Год назад

    During the netbook era, their bobcat cores(e-series) were faster than Intel atom in both CPU and IGP(AMD Radeon vs Intel GMA graphics FTW😂)

    • @dino.techtv
      @dino.techtv Год назад

      and way better than VIA Nano with S3 Graphics!!

  • @ezg8448
    @ezg8448 Год назад

    I believe Jim Keller created the Zen architecture in the beginning, and once he was done he left AMD.
    There's still tons of work afterwards even if he created the CPU to make a production sku and given the time difference it does makes some sense.

  • @pixelsbyprince
    @pixelsbyprince Год назад

    Nairds talking to nairds ❤

  • @dangingerich2559
    @dangingerich2559 Год назад

    I'd like to see AMD move to a large shared L2 on the CCX and move the L3 (and 3D Vcache) to the IO die. This should allow for larger L3 cache sizes and faster clocks on the CCX, but might increase latencies. However, I'm not sure how difficult this would be to design, so it might just be a pipe dream of mine.

    • @KarrasBastomi
      @KarrasBastomi Год назад +7

      No. L3 still on 3DV, no way it's gonna move to IO. If they afraid of Intela adamantine, they can add shared L4 on IO die. Better in latency department.

  • @denvera1g1
    @denvera1g1 Год назад +1

    3MB of L2 per core?
    Thats more L2 cache per core than the 7840HS has of L3 per core.
    Is this a unified L2/L3 cache somewhat like IBM Zcache? Something like 32MB of L2 for an 8 core chip

    • @TheEVEInspiration
      @TheEVEInspiration Год назад

      I thought the same thing, in the end all architectures will have to move to such a caching scheme. Simply due to it being impossible to keep adding more cache due to scaling issues. The obvious direction has to be in using the same total amount more effectively. For now it will not be like zCache, simple because 3 MB is too small for that (IBM used 32MB L2 per core).

    • @denvera1g1
      @denvera1g1 Год назад

      @@TheEVEInspiration Oh its 32MB per core? Wow, I thought it was 32MB total which is still alot of L2, though obviously slower than L2 because of the depth

  • @25MHzisbest
    @25MHzisbest Год назад

    Let's hope the IO chiplet gets a rework and they manage to double the 3600mhz ddr4 sweet spot to 7200mhz on zen5 and don't do a cut and paste from zen4 like zen 2 to 3.

  • @paulsim7589
    @paulsim7589 Год назад

    Hmm. 3Mb of L2, means you could have 3 threads per core with enough cache to make it perform.

  • @picolete
    @picolete Год назад

    Still waiting for big cache APUs

  • @gstormcz
    @gstormcz Год назад +1

    With DDR4 and starting at 80 USD, with mainboards from 120ISD that would be a deal of year. Maybe even decade. But only if no boot issues.
    Really, I liked AMD cpus too, half of my cpus have been from AMD, exactly 5 out of 9 total, if I don't count temporary second hand P3 866. Better value, good performance.
    Just surprised how long some new builds boot Windows. Doesn't seem it is just more cores and bigger RAM effect, probably those builds are calculated from clean install incl all MS junk and also default BIOS settings no fast boot.
    Speaking about Zen5, I am curious what pricing incl mainboards and how are going to be DDR5 priced (probably only supported option for those cpus)!
    But I don't worry of bigger AMD performance
    .. either better deal from AMD or better value from Intel forced to price adjustments, if needed.
    Consumers win.

    • @SirMo
      @SirMo Год назад +1

      > Just surprised how long some new builds boot Windows.
      Many motherboards have RAM training enabled. Which is why the boot takes long. Look for a way to disable this. My Zen1 had the same issue, but it was fixed with subsequent BIOS updates.

    • @Tigrou7777
      @Tigrou7777 Год назад +1

      @@SirMo I recently bought a Zen 3 platform + M.2 drive on Win11 (had SSD before, a 9700K and Win10). I'm amazed how fast it boot and shutdown. PC is a few meters away from screen and sometimes it's almost already booted before I turn on monitor.

    • @gstormcz
      @gstormcz Год назад

      @@SirMo Thx for top
      I am ok (i3-10100f B460M 2xy8G DDR4 2666 w WD Blue 500GB nvme 3.0, W10, booting 6.3s, but saw some nasty times at Zen 4, I guess on Jayz2cents). I think default settings of BIOS with RAM test and Windows clean install would load half minute maybe. Still its alot upto 50s on most powerfull cpus, lol even with RAM test)

  • @desertfish74
    @desertfish74 Год назад

    Tents to rent. I can't unread that after someone pointed it out on another video

  • @marknikolich6986
    @marknikolich6986 Год назад

    The thing that I find interesting is that the 30% is plausible if they upgrade all areas of the chip. But based on current leaks from when I'm writing this. It will be closer to 20% because they are not going to get every % due to cost. So a few % they will just ignore and settle for slightly lover gains. A cost efficient scalable architecture. Zen. Has a nice ring too it eh? AMD picked the technology they did for chiplets to reduce price at the cost of performance. Intel is now going to implement their tiles to reduce and optimize power consumption and performance but at a cost. I mean it can save money too. But I think not as much as AMD. Very interesting rn. But in all honesty, I'm cheering for AMD. Lol when I built my 1st AMD PC in 2000, I had no idea we would see this much power in my lifetime! Lol

  • @_anubias_
    @_anubias_ Год назад

    Awesome video, Jim!