Donate!
Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register :: View Members
Pages: 1 ... 19 20 21 22 23 ... 31
Send Topic Print
2020 -- new Intel failures & successes (Read 12299 times)
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #300 - 08/11/19 at 11:34:18
 

https://www.extremetech.com/computing/296453-welcome-to-the-second-golden-age...

Here is a different viewpoint on AMD's second golden age --- it points out that Intel couldn't completely cope with last year's AMD innovations and Intel has made no real progress in the year since the last match up.   Now AMD has moved the high jump bar up a notch and this implies that AMD's rate of improvement is just going to continue ---- driving Intel into the ground like a tent stake.







Part of AMD’s advantage currently is that it can hit multiple Intel weaknesses simultaneously.  Need lots of PCIe lanes?  AMD is better.  Want PCIe 4.0?  AMD is better.  If your workloads scale optimally with more cores, no one is selling more cores per socket than AMD.

The move to 7nm has given AMD a large advantage in power consumption as well, particularly when you consider server retirements.   STH reports single-threaded power consumption on a Xeon Platinum 8180 at ~430W (wall power), compared to ~340W of wall power for the AMD Epyc 7742 system.

What they also note, however, is that the high core count on AMD’s newest CPUs will allow them to retire between 6-8 sockets worth of 2017 Intel Xeons (60-80 cores) in order to consolidate the workloads into a single AMD Epyc system. The power savings from retiring 3-4 dual-socket servers is much much much larger than the ~90W difference between the two CPUs.   This is enough energy savings payback by itself to justify buying new AMD systems going forward.

So, Intel is forced into Playing AMD’s Game Now

Intel can cut its prices to respond to AMD in the short-term. Long-term, it’s going to have to challenge AMD directly. That’s going to mean delivering more cores at lower prices, with higher amounts of reasonably priced normal memory supported per socket.

Intel's Cooper Lake, which is built on 14nm and includes additional support for new AI-focused AVX-512 instructions, will arrive in the first half of next year. That chip will help Intel focus in on some of the markets it wants to compete in, but it won’t change the core count differential between the two companies. Similarly, Intel may have trouble putting a $3000 – $7000 premium on support for 2TB – 4.5TB of RAM given that AMD is willing to support up to 4TB of memory on every CPU socket.

Intel still wants vendors to invest in building support for its Optane DC Persistent Memory, but it isn’t clear how many are doing so. Nothing that Intel offers now operates at full rated speed unless backed by COPIOUS AMOUNTS of Optane memory in several forms and locations on the Intel motherboard.  

Much of the recent speed increases from Intel have actually been all the large amounts of Optane clustered all around the CPUs.  

The current rock-bottom prices for both NAND and DRAM have made it much harder for Optane/Intel to compete in-market.   AMD's products all use normal memory types and AMD still functions AS FAST OR FASTER than Intel's very very expensive Optane mix while doing so.


Two years ago Intel chose to bet their farm on using lots & lots & lots of Optane Memory instead of doing CPU lithography advances and basic design improvements and this decision has come up a crapper in light of current realities ......

Please note that even Intel's old memory business partner Micron has now given up on Optane as a bad bet as it had never proved out to be the world beating advancement that Intel's brown vapor PR had always touted it to be.




Undecided

What agonies does next year hold for the long suffering "incompetents" at Intel and their Wintel buddy MS ......




Intel is now throwing a ton of shade at MS for up to 20 historically faulty drivers that they have incorporated into the Win 10 worldview, drivers that once they are mitigated are really really going to hurt Intel's chips performance levels a whole lot more.

Wintel as a pair is going to pay a mighty price for a dozens of years of laziness, back when they first knew about these issues but instead chose to sweep them under the rug rather than fix these underlying issues.    Yep, more class action lawsuits are being posted and people are signing up now to get in line for their damages payouts.

By doing this, Intel hopes that the class action lawsuit bills fall mostly on MS and not on them quite so much ......

So, as of today realize that "Microsoft running on Intel" isn't going to be nearly as fast nor secure nor as controversy free as running Linux on Ryzen will be going on out into the future.

Also realize that this same "avoid the issues, avoid the penalties" mentality still exists at Wintel as Intel in particular wants to continue to put out hardware that completely lacks any hardware fixes these 8 old original predictive mitigations and also has no fixes for these 20+ new driver based mitigations that still need fixing.  

Really, the Wintel pair simply cannot stand becoming any "functionally slower" due to more mitigations or they WILL LOSE YET MORE FACE inside their industry.

Tom's Hardware as one of the better test houses has begun listing all their test results as "with mitigations" and immediately listing them again "without mitigations" so as to calmly call out Intel on the sheer size of their self-deceiving processor rating practices.

Tongue
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/14/19 at 05:27:10 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #301 - 08/13/19 at 00:36:48
 

https://www.forbes.com/sites/daveywinder/2019/08/11/critical-windows-10-warni...


Critical Windows 10 Warning: 800 Millions Of Users At Risk


As the Black Hat security conference comes to an end in Las Vegas, so the DEF CON hacker convention begins. It didn't take long for the first critical warnings for Windows users to emerge as a result. This one is particularly worrying as, according to the Eclypsium researchers who gave the presentation, the issue applies "to all modern versions of Microsoft Windows," which leaves millions of Windows 10 users at risk of system compromise.

What did the Eclypsium researchers reveal?
In a nutshell, the Eclypsium researchers found a common design flaw within the hardware device drivers from multiple vendors including Huawei, Intel, NVIDIA, Realtek Semiconductor, SuperMicro and Toshiba. In total, the number of hardware vendors affected runs to 20 and includes every major BIOS vendor. The nature of the vulnerability has the potential for the widespread compromise of Windows 10 machines.

Eclypsium’s research team were investigating how insecure drivers can be abused to attack a device and gain a foothold on the system it is part of. "Drivers that provide access to system BIOS or system components for the purposes of updating firmware, running diagnostics, or customizing options on the component," the researchers stated during their presentation, "can allow attackers to turn the very tools used to manage a system into powerful threats that can escalate privileges and persist invisibly on the host."

The drivers were found to have design flaws that enable what are meant to be "low-privilege" applications to be used by a threat actor in such a way as to potentially compromise parts of the Windows operating system that should only be accessible by "privileged" applications. That includes the Windows kernel at the very heart of the operating system.

Certified for trust
The dangerous escalation of privileges problem, giving an attacker read and write access at the same level as the kernel, becomes more problematical when you realize the level of trust that can be exploited here.

These were not "rogue" drivers, but officially sanctioned ones. They were all from trusted vendors, all signed by trusted certificate authorities and all certified by Microsoft.

As the drivers are designed specifically to update firmware, the seriousness of the issue becomes very apparent, very quickly. The flawed drivers not only provide the mechanism to make these changes but also the privileges to do so. If a threat actor can manipulate this combination of bad coding and signed certification, well, the outcome isn't going to look pretty.


The researchers stated that there are "multiple examples of attacks in the wild that take advantage of this class of vulnerable drivers." Examples provided included the Slingshot APT campaign which installs a kernel rootkit and "LoJax malware" that installs malicious code in device firmware that can even survive a full Windows reinstallation.

Has the problem been fixed yet?
Mickey Shkatov, a principal researcher at Eclypsium, told ZDNet that "Some vendors, like Intel and Huawei, have already issued some updates." Others, which are independent BIOS vendors, like Phoenix and Insyde, "are releasing their updates to their customer OEMs," Shkatov said.

The Eclypsium research reveals that the security issue applies to "all modern versions of Microsoft Windows," and "there is currently no universal mechanism to keep a Windows machine from loading one of these known bad drivers." That said, group policies for Windows Enterprise, Pro and Sever could provide a degree of mitigation to "a subset of users," the researchers stated.

The full list of vendors that have issued updates, which you should install as soon as possible, can be found here.      https://eclypsium.com/2019/08/10/screwed-drivers-signed-sealed-delivered/

What has Microsoft said?
A Microsoft statement said, "In order to exploit vulnerable drivers, an attacker would need to have already compromised the computer. To help mitigate this class of issues, Microsoft recommends that customers use Windows Defender Application Control to block known vulnerable software and drivers." As well as turning on memory integrity for capable devices in Windows Security, Microsoft also recommended using Windows 10 and the Edge browser "for the best protection."


Guys, we are talking about people using very widely dispersed info on documented drivers in a way that is just slightly different from what they have been doing all along.   Microsoft in this last paragraph above is just whistling out loud in the dark as they walk past the grave yard,  knowing darne well that there are evil things lurking among the tombstones jest aching to reach out over the wall and grab them whistling fools by their headbones  ......



==================================================



So, the first brown vapor PR reaction from MS was to simply blow it all off, saying that Windows Defender would handle it all for you jest fine ........  jest some more standard normal Windows patchwork was needed, in other words.        Ha, bullshite

Yesterday, Microsoft had said, "In order to exploit vulnerable drivers, an attacker would need to have already compromised the computer. To help mitigate this class of issues, Microsoft recommends that customers use Windows Defender Application Control to block known vulnerable software and drivers."   It is obvious this MS talking head that said this had no idea what he was addressing, nor did this spokesperson understand the programming of the OS system in any depth at all.

This MS Brown Vapor BS PR response totally missed the important point that the drivers in question (all of which are MS Certified as bug proof by MS) ARE ALREADY SITTING ON YOUR MACHINE AND ARE ACTUALLY A FUNCTIONAL PART OF THE MS WINDOWS OPERATING SYSTEM THAT YOU ARE USING RIGHT NOW.

Hey, you can't get more "already compromised" than that, now can you?

https://www.forbes.com/sites/gordonkelly/2019/08/13/microsoft-windows-10-upgr...

Today however paints quite a different story.  Simon Pope, Microsoft’s Director of Incident Response is now posting in its Security Response Center a real admission of the EXTREMELY SERIOUS NATURE AND THE HUGE EXISTING SCOPE of the danger posed by the two weaponized malwares that are already known to be out there in the wild eating up computers right and left.  

Microsoft told users that it has discovered two “critical” Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerabilities which are “background wormable” through the compromised drivers.   [color=#ff0000][b]This means the affected 20 plus drivers can be weaponized to launch malwares that jumps automatically on contact from PC to server to new PCs, spreading across the world at backbone speeds without any action being needed from the user.  And there are potentially 800 hundred million networked completely vulnerable MS computers that the stuff can leapfrog around between,  all sitting out on the web each day talking to each other.

In a statement, Simon Pope, Microsoft’s Director of Incident Response, confirmed the vulnerabilities affect "all supported versions of Windows 10, including server versions." Back in March, Microsoft pegged Windows 10 numbers at 800M. In addition to this, Pope confirmed other "affected versions of Windows are Windows 7 SP1, Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, Windows Server 2012, Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2012 R2" - these are important platforms but with far less market share.

Pope stressed speed is of the essence, stating: “It is important that affected systems are patched as quickly as possible,” while ZDNet warned users that it is now “A race to patch before very widespread attacks get underway”.

To patch the vulnerabilities go to CVE-2019-1181 and CVE-2019-1182, find your Windows version in the ‘Security Updates’ section and download the appropriate patch. Microsoft is pushing these updates out to Windows Update but, as Pope warns, it’s best to act immediately.

https://portal.msrc.microsoft.com/en-US/security-guidance/advisory/CVE-2019-1181


https://portal.msrc.microsoft.com/en-US/security-guidance/advisory/CVE-2019-1182
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 08/17/19 at 17:38:56 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #302 - 08/13/19 at 01:03:48
 

https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/amd-zen-3-news-rumors-release-date-ar...

The Upcoming AMD Zen 3: Everything we know so far



AMD announced in early August 2019 that the design phase for Zen 3 was now complete and that its hardware developers were moving on to the design challenges faced by Zen 4.

With Zen 3's designs completed, AMD can now move on to testing and prototyping Zen 3 chips. How successful that process is will determine whether we’ll see Zen 3-based CPUs show up in early summer 2020, or more towards the holiday season.  Either way, we expect Zen 3 to show up in 2020 as part of a full, commercial line up of CPUs.

The full range of processors has a trio of codenames.  Milan will be for high-end servers, a replacement for the Epyc Rome CPUs.  Vermeer will be for high-end desktops and enthusiasts, possibly Threadripper CPUs, while Renoir will be for mainstream desktop CPUs and mobile APUs.

These mainstream AMD chipsets will face off with Intel’s Tiger Lake CPUs on the desktop.

PERFORMANCE
Zen 2 CPUs were a major advancement over the first-generation Zen and enhanced Zen+ designs. It offered double-digit instructions per clock improvements, boosted clock speeds, and additional cores for improved multithreading capabilities. Since Zen 3 will be more of an evolution than a revolution, we don’t expect the same major enhancements, but there should be some notable improvements all the same.

Due to the new manufacturing methods used in the creation of Zen 3, we expect to see improvements in clock speed and energy efficiency.  That could help AMD’s Ryzen processors crest 5GHz for the first time right out of the box.  There’s also the possibility of new instruction sets, which could enhance the entire range’s performance in particular workloads.  Full 7nm EUV+ at TSMC also brings along abilities to triple layer burn features into standard silicone wafers, something AMD has been quick to utilize this past year to add extra cache memory to a few current Ryzen Zen 2 gaming chipsets.

ARCHITECTURE
Zen 3 is based on a 7nm+ process node. While technically the distance between transistors shouldn’t change much, the new manufacturing technique known as extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) enables a thinner burn track and a far denser packing of transistors (up to 20 percent) than Zen 2’s fuzzier deep ultraviolet (DUV) methodology. That extra density should improve energy efficiency, which AMD can in turn leverage to enhance clock speed or other facets of the processors’ performance.

In an interview with TechPowerUp in April 2019, AMD’s CTO Mark Papermaster suggested that Zen 3 would prioritize energy efficiency, but that we would still see some modest instructions per clock improvements over Zen 2 as well. That should lead to greater single threaded and multithreaded performance. When combined with additional clock speed, these CPUs should be even better in gaming than the already excellent Ryzen 3900X.


Remember please, that Intel rates everything from stone dead cold (pre-boot cold temps) and that in less than a minute the Intel "rated speeds" simply no longer apply to anything that exists in the real world.    

AMD however rates their stuff fully warmed up and under full load using the AMD supplied stock fan and fin cooler system, so AMD's functional speed ratings actually may well be faster than Intel's never declared fully heated up functional speed ratings ----- but this situation reminds us that Intel ALWAYS intends to mislead their customer base and Intel always wants to "win the PR war" any way they can.

So far, Tom's Hardware is the only one offering fully heated up speed rating comparisons and they are showing Ryzen 2 chipsets have greater fully warmed running speeds than Intel's finest --- even when Intel is running water coolers (in a few cases anyway).

Yes, Intel now recommends and requires WATER COOLING and lots of Optane memory in some of its "stock configurations".           Roll Eyes
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 08/17/19 at 17:40:30 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #303 - 08/13/19 at 09:22:44
 

https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsofts-windows-is-falling-apart-says-google...

School is getting ready to start again.  

Parents are dealing with getting a set of new Chromebooks for their kids, and the kids are getting not so subtly encouraged by Bill Nye the Science guy to go ask their parents why do they still stay stuck on Windows machines when the Chromebooks work so much better and are so much easier to use?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DS0H0XDDotI       actually, your kids do routinely use both systems and have indeed earned the right to have a valid opinion about them

This constitutes a prefect storm scenario as just now Windows has just dumped 20+ brand new security issues on 800 million unsuspecting Windows Users.  These are brand new security issues that are all about the in excess of >20 known sources of hack-able Certified Windows system drivers that can be readily used to create large security exposures that allow malwares full access to your PC.  This sort of action makes Bill Nye's "Windows falling apart" motif actually very very real right now.

"Sometimes, it's hard to let go of a bad decision," intones Nye. This, he explains, is called the Sunk Cost Fallacy. At least, by behavioral economists who had to coin a term so they could quickly refer to this particular mental illness.

WINDOWS 10

It takes Nye nigh on two minutes to expose his real point. Which is that Windows is a sad jalopy that should be dispatched to the dump.


Note:  I didn't write this Nye/nigh pitiful pun stuff, CHRIS MATYSZCZYK at ZDnet wrote that

No, Nye doesn't quite say that.
in a simple clear fashion.   Instead, he says he that he, too, suffered from the Status Quo Bias, another fancy, quasi-scientific term for irrationally resisting change.

Then he walks over to a sad old sports car that's being held together with duct tape and patches.

"We've been through a lot together," he says of the car. Then he pats the hood and spontaneous multiple disintegrations begin.

How do I know that this miserable old vehicle represents Windows? Because the extremely subtle license plate reads WNDWS on the front bumper.


Roll Eyes

https://youtu.be/DS0H0XDDotI      it is a short 3 minute long YouTube video, just take the tiny bit of time to watch it as Bill Nye makes some very good points during his short 3 minute video.    (funded by Google, of course)
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 08/17/19 at 17:32:58 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #304 - 08/16/19 at 14:34:34
 

lower-clock-speeds-on-intels-10th-gen-ice-lake-cpus-arent-a-disaster.html

https://www.pcworld.com/article/3410589/is-ice-lake-better-than-ryzen-9.html




Intel is the overly large on on top, AMD is the squarish one below that.

OK, we are talking new BS brown vapor set up testing by Intel again, specifically the new Ice Lake 10nm as the case in question.  

You were just faithfully promised a 18% speed/performance and battery life upper by INTEL.    The actual first test samples (as cherry picked and installed and tweeked inside INTEL owned laptops did not give these +18% results, but instead tested same - same to the old 14+++nm Intel laptop chipsets that are commonly out there right now with disappointing (no improvements seen, actually really not as good battery life results were seen).

Intel just got slammed hard for the crappy battery life results and flat out questioned as to why anybody would build or buy a 10nm Intel Ice Lake product because of these somewhat poor test results.

Indeed, there suddenly are no plans by the big builders to carry forward with the entire Ice Lake line of desktop products, as they are SLOWER than the old INTEL 14+++nm desktop chipsets they would compete against and Ice Lake poses no competition to the latest 7nm all-in-one Ryzen processors from AMD much less the Ryzen lineup we have today.

Because of these vocal and misleading INTEL challenges, AMD has brought forward their next APU series of processors early and PLEASE watch out what the Intel to AMD "comparisons" you are being shown are really comparing what to what, PLEASE --- there are too many INTEL benchmarking games being played here to even list all of them.    

The easiest way for you to catch the BS is to use this chart and spot how far back in time (how far out of sync) the INTEL match ups you are being shown really are.   INTEL does not want to compare themselves to any current modern state of the art AMD processor of any current generation it seems like ..... nor do they want to compare 10nm ICE LAKE against the most current crop of modern 14+++ nm INTEL processors either.    (except for the new INTEL graphics included that is, INTEL can claim an improvement to their old stuff there)

TAKE NOTHING AT FACE VALUE, there is lots & lots of lying vaporware and BS are being applied lately by INTEL because, quite frankly they've really got bupkiss to show you right now, but are instead trying to sell some raw freshly produced INTEL PR on some some vague future brown vapor bupkiss, a set of misleading intentional lies  that is going to cost them a bundle in class action court rooms soon enough ......



Spot where you really are on this graph, KNOW ABOUT the two items you are comparing to each other.

Lastly, always remember that INTEL rates processor speed from a stone cold starting point (rating off the one very best core in the set) and that INTEL does not apply security mitigations for all their various illnesses to test sets (because it could cost them 15-25% of their already marginal performance).


PART OF THIS MESS IS THE INTENTIONAL CONFUSION BETWEEN THE LOW END ICE LAKE UNIT AND THE "i7" UPPER END ICE LAKE UNIT.   I have to confess to still  being confused by the two of them, and I suspect this was intentional on Intel's part.   Intel's lower end Ice Lake unit appears to be a stone lose-lose situation no matter what you compare it to, while the upper end Ice Lake unit should be able so show break even to a bit better than break even due to the improvements in the new generation of Intel graphics.


Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/08/19 at 19:36:54 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #305 - 08/18/19 at 23:08:46
 

https://www.techspot.com/news/81496-intel-10th-gen-18-core-beats-core-i9.html

Intel's 10th-gen 18-core beats Core i9-9980XE by 11%, Ryzen remains faster
Intel beats up on itself thoroughly, but does not touch AMD's commanding lead at all



Why it matters:    Intel’s next glorious 18-core behemoth has thundered into the Geekbench 4 arena where it has vanquished the i9-9980XE by 11% in the multi-core test, a bold display of dominance for an engineering sample.

But can it handle the heat of the Ryzen 9 3950X it was doubtlessly built to combat? Apparently not, given that the Ryzen chip scores 12% higher in the multi-core testing, and 9% higher in the single-core testing.

Now for the breakdown: we know this chip is next-gen, because Geekbench lists the stepping as seven, while released chips are on the fifth stepping. It’s also likely this specific chip is a Xeon as it was tested in a Dell Precision 5820 workstation that is only sold with Xeons, but that’s academic really, as there is functionally no difference between a Xeon and its Core i9 equivalent.

Model      Cores/
Threads      Base/Boost (GHz)      L3 Cache (MB)      MSRP      Multi-Core Score      Single-Core Score
Intel 18-core*      18/36      2.2/3.2      24.75      -      100%      100%
Intel i9-9980XE      18/36      3.0/4.4      24.75      $1,700      90%      100%
Intel i9-7980XE      18/36      2.6/4.2      24.75      $1,765      80%      99%
Ryzen 9 3950X*      16/32      3.3/4.3      64.00      $750      112%      109%
Ryzen 9 3900X      12/24      3.8/4.6      64.00      $500      84%      105%

*Specfications of unreleased hardware (as detected by Geekbench) are not set in stone.

Assuming the 54,597 score is accurate, the new chip slots in nicely above the i9-9980XE/Xeon W-2195 in multi-core tasks, so we could expect it to be excellent at the usual things: renders, simulations, file compression, encryption/decryption, encoding, exporting, etc.

In these tasks, the i9-9980XE tends to roughly match the older Threadripper 2990WX (32-core) so the new Intel chip should come out slightly on top for 1-2 months until the new Threadripper lineup is released.   Ryzen 9 3950X is a standard Ryzen top of the line unit which is beating Intel's best at the moment, and we are awaiting the new Threadripper line up as well, which is due out next month.

However, one must also consider the price of these things. Previous mainstream Intel 18-cores have had an MSRP in excess of $1,700 and in practice go for about $2,000 and their Xeon counterparts go for about $3,000, while the Ryzen 3950X which beats both of these Intel processors will cost only $750.

Quite frankly, that $1000+ price advantage that AMD is keeping on these top end units totally kills the viability of this new Intel processor --- unless Intel decides to radically re-evaluate their i9 and Xeon pricing strategies that is.


Once again, this is an Intel move that SIGNIFIES NO PROGRESS as it is simply the rebranding another old huge slow Xeon mainframe processor ---- and note, this old/new unit does not go any faster than it did before, certainly not anywhere near the 5+ghz plus clock speeds that we were promised by the Intel talking heads.
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 08/20/19 at 18:26:24 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #306 - 09/23/19 at 05:25:30
 

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-cpu-sales-intel-ryzen-german-market-ret...

AMD Comes Roaring Back: Analyzing Five Years of CPU Sales at Mindfactory



The graph above is with AMD consistently sandbagging unmercifully on all their newest stuff as Intel isn't improving any at all (save for a dubious very few 10nm laptops).  

AMD is being very careful to keep the range of actual performance improvement and pricing differential at about the same distance apart compared to Intel --- this fuels their removal of Intel market share at a rate that AMD can support.  

AMD is also being careful to post rapid fixes for anything Intel starts to use as a FUD talking point.

In the past month Intel and its paid talking heads have pushed a lot of FUD nonsense that said:

AMD processors runs hot, hotter than Intel ----- this was debunked as simply not true unless you were running ALL of the AMD cores at full tilt during a benchmark test (a thing that really does not happen in the real world).   Intel's boys carelessly lost track of the fact there are TWICE AS MANY OR MORE AMD CORES running at full tilt during these tests and that the fact the entire heat load of all of the extra AMD cores did not exceed Intel's normal heat rise by very much at all.   Each AMD core runs a lot cooler than an Intel core can run.   But yes, there are a lot more AMD cores to make heat during a full on benchmark test.

Intel made a lot of noise several weeks ago about a few low performing AMD cores that were seen in testing, and a lot more noise about AMD having "throttled their cores 25% more due to suspected (predicted) low service life".   AMD responded that their service life is fine, and yes out of the 2x more than Intel cores in an AMD processor some cores do perform slower, but all are within the now understood published acceptance ranges.   AMD also points out that Intel does the exact same thing, but Intel allows some cores to vary much more than AMD allows.   AMD's response was prompt and factual, and these facts were verified by Tom's Hardware.

Also, within 1 week AMD's vendors were pushing out BIOS updates for their motherboard products that caused these slow cores to speed up some and this same BIOS update also changed the scheduling portion such that the slower AMD cores got less heavy traffic put against them by the scheduler.   Intel's current talking point FUD issues basically disappeared at that point in time.

So what is really happening?

Intel simply is losing a lot of ground to AMD and Intel hates that fact a lot.  

Fear, Uncertainty and Dismay has always been an Intel marketing tool and that aspect has not changed at all.   This week's Intel FUD is saying that AMD is going to run out of manufacturing capacity and the "current shortages" of AMD chipsets are proof of this.

Look at the graph up at the top.   AMD is selling so many more chipsets (and Intel is selling so few) that yes, AMD is being careful about the timing of introducing new advanced products to be sure that they have enough 7nm chiplets flowing to build yet another hit product.  

In reality, Apple kicking into their full new 7nm product production cycle has stressed TSMC's ability to make everybody happy all at the same time at 7nm++ right now.   Apart from AMD and Apple, TSMC's lead times have just tripled for all the little guys who are just now placing  their very first 7nm orders.

TSMC's solution is to rapidly ramp up 5 more brand new ASML 5nm lines.  TSMC wisely spends their money on next year's best and brightest, not on old stuff with less than a year to go on it's primo lifespan.  

TSMC has released all of the build tools for 5nm to their customers now and is getting 5nm 14 layer deep burn orders already placed on them from AMD, Apple and others.   Full 5nm Production at TSMC begins soon, like March of next year type soon (or sooner if your name is Apple).

So, TSMC isn't buying any additional 7nm lines, but is spending all their money staying ahead of the coming 5nm wave.   When Apple and AMD shift over to 5nm, then some of the current pressure will come off of the existing 7nm production lines.   Remember please, that the new 5nm lines can do a 7nm product in a pinch, just that all of the rest of the 14 layer stuff won't be used when doing 7nm but if the demand is there and the new 5nm line is idle ....... well,  heck, go for it.

Bean pickers are funny, new production lines need to be booked solid so as to generate a revenue flow to pay for the new line out of its own cash flow (while you are paying for it actively, anyway).   TSMC likes to be booked solid with a waiting list so they KNOW they get their full utilization of the money they just spend on new production equipment.


===================================================


Good news, Intel has finally placed their first real orders for some real 7nm++ EUV production equipment --- this puts them 1.5 years minimum away from making a real 7nm full production line of chipsets ...... and Intel is 1.5 years behind all the hockey stick boys who had ordered their stuff late this spring and are most of the way through their wait period.

Intel is calling their old home grown 7nm lines "10nm lines" now, so expect Intel to make a whole lot of 10nm stuff before they make any real quantities of "new" Intel 7nm++ fresh off of their really new new really really 7nm EUV lines, the ones that Intel just placed orders on ......

     Roll Eyes       .....  i.e. by the time everybody else will be moving from 5nm down to 3nm

Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/19/19 at 22:21:46 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #307 - 09/26/19 at 08:01:56
 

Open Source Simultaneous Multi-Threading vs Intel Hyperthreading

Open Source SMT works just fine, and if an exploit is written against it, the Open Source boys are quick to change the core code such that the exploit (and any cousins, brothers, sisters etc.) cannot possibly work going out into the future.   Intel and MS won't (or can't) fix their Hyperthreading code in a similar fashion and tend to do nothing until there is a bunch of massive illnesses about out there in the real world with class action suits banging them in the head.

So why bring this up again?   Intel Hyperthreading is currently still broken with active exploits making it suicide to use Hyperthreading at all on any 2 year old Intel processors.   Wintel has had shut to off Hyperthreading completely on many of older Intel processors because it is a suicide dumb move to go there with active exploits out in the wild waiting to use your machine as their riding pony.

AMD and SMT however are working great on all AMD processors with zero functional exploits, giving AMD processors quite the advantage over Intel in mixed processing of all sorts.

What could possibly happen to make this situation worst for Intel?

Why, Open source has just released their version 4.0 of SMT.   The SMT4 core code is allowing for FOUR (4) active threads per processor core.    AMD has announced that, as an active part of the SMT consortium that built the stuff (along with IBM and others) they will implement SMT4 at 4 threads per core with their Zen 3 line which is coming up in March of next year.

And remember, AMD processors pack a bunch of cores, twice as many cores as Intel right now, generally speaking.  

And now  the Zen 3 AMD cores are going to be doing 2-4 times as many threads per core  compared to Intel next year ??????

Advantage on top of Advantage !!!!        Shocked       Confirmation came very quickly on this one ---- yep, AMD will be pushing 4 threads per core in an attempt to get yet MORE THROUGHPUT PERFORMANCE out of all their many many many cores and their wider faster PCIe 4.0 data channels.    

Zen 3 is also showing some early signs of using the 15 layer multi-layer burn "larger on chip memory" a la TSMC 5nm technology on some of the more advanced AMD processor chiplets.   Extra on chip memory is needed to support the 4x extra SMT threads on each and every AMD core.  New sockets and new motherboards will be needed to max out all the extra new PCIe 4.0 fast data channels and to provide for maximum use of the 4x SMT threads per core capabilities.


In short, Intel's much ballyhoo'd single thread speed isn't any sort of advantage any more, not really.  

No PR vapor blasts or any other words in response coming out from Intel just yet ......       Roll Eyes

(just some pain filled wimpers coming from the Intel guy over there wedged into the corner holding his head in his hands, rocking back and forth muttering to himself)


==================================================


https://www.itworld.com/article/2724598/why-dell-is-selling-linux-again.html

Dell is selling consumer line machines specifically configured with Ubuntu Linux and on the IT side of things you can get Dell Business Machines configured with Red Hat Linux.  

Dell has them set up on unique web pages proudly announcing Linux now, not just having Linux listed down in the "Options" section ......  Linux has become a selling point.

Why is this preference shift happening now?   An endless stream of "unfixable" MS Windows OS screw ups seems to lay at the root of most of this preference changeover.   A secondary reason is that Linux fully supports the new wider AMD pipeline counts and Linux fully supports the new 4x SMT thread counts while MS Windows does not (not on all machines anyway).
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/12/19 at 05:15:26 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #308 - 10/02/19 at 00:05:14
 

https://wccftech.com/intel-guts-cpu-pricing-response-ryzen/

Intel cuts some prices by 44%



HEDT SKU      Cores / Threads      New Price      Old Price*
Intel Core i9-10980XE   18/36      $979      $1979
Intel Core i9-10940X      14/28      $784      $1387
Intel Core i9-10920X      12/24      $689      $1189
Intel Core i9-10900X      10/20      $590      $989

OK, Intel is sorta kinda getting real now ...... they have half the cores of AMD, a quarter to half as many computing threads, and whole warehouses sitting full of older model chipsets that are NOT MOVING ANY AT ALL ...... what is a boy to do  ????

Mind you this newly announced 44% price cut is a partial move on Intel's part, it does not make them price or performance competitive to AMD, but it does help Intel to turn warehouse stocks into ready cash which Intel needs very badly.    

And as a first move at least it is in the right direction.   Intel post price cut pricing is within 10% of AMD's real selling prices.   But you can't buy from Intel at this price, only Intel's historical builder buddies can buy at this 44% off price right now.

Intel has replied to AMD's last announcement, this time in a response that actually could meant something.

Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/04/19 at 23:17:33 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #309 - 10/05/19 at 20:34:26
 

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-zen-3-zen-4-epyc-rome-milan-genoa-archi...

AMD's mainframe guys just attended a big mainframe conference in England where two of them got on the stage and expounded on what AMD is gonna do in mainframes over the next 4 years.

Gist of what I could understand is that using the same existing socket and format, the memory available on each chiplet would triple to 3x using TSMC deep layer burn techniques and the thread counts and I/O pipelines would triple/quadruple.   Throughput will go up by a third and speed with go up by 20%-25% (and this is on a lowly tock cycle, not a big redesign cycle).

However, by going ahead and changing the mainframe socket and the various motherboard data channel features now that means that AMD can tee up all those extra channels and all those extra SMT threads to be much much much much more effective and much much better.  

But it is generally thought that for a lowly tock cycle, no such major investment requirements will be pursued since the next year the 5nm wave will come through making any big retooling money spent this upcoming year "as wasted money".

Plus, remember whatever they want to put into Ryzen has to be developed to go into mainframe stuff first (there is a half year lead time between the two).   This same technology would play in Consumer Ryzen during the same lead time period, as the mainframe boyos have again simply stated that the same chiplets go into EVERYTHING AMD makes.  

What they want to have happen in mainframe has to happen everywhere else in AMD at the same time.  Big sets of moves like this generally tend to converge around a lithography shrink such as the big 5nm shrink taking place in the first half of next year.

We knew that, but it is always good to see AMD has simply baldly stated this fact right along with a 4 year future pathway plan that 1) makes sense  2) is practical  3) will likely actually happen.

Intel is fumbling on their future pathway stuff right now very very badly --- Intel lacks the "main technology future pathway" to hang their hat on, and as such everything else gets all "very shaky" one year out due to this key lack.   Intel struggles just to keep their current lies consistent between departments, in other words.

Intel is still struggling to get to a true 7nm, but by the time they finally get there everyone else will be transitioning at 5-3nm.    5nm is real now and 5nm chipsets for phones ships this spring from Apple and Qualcomm and Mediatek and Huawei.    

Samsung has 5nm up and running right now, under the moniker "5nm low power early"
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/13/19 at 22:36:10 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #310 - 10/07/19 at 08:43:54
 

https://liliputing.com/2019/10/the-new-fire-hd-10-is-amazons-first-tablet-wit...



Many times I have said, if you want to know the real "state of the art" look to the lowest common denominator, the low end products, to judge if progress is really happening or not.

Right now, the low end stuff is best represented by the AMAZON FIRE line of tablets and the WALMART ONN line of tablets.

In the past six months, these lines of products has gotten 30% stronger processors, better pipelines and throughputs and Amazon has picked up USB C and the ability to use USB C "on the go"  (Walmart is behind on this, but not for long I suspect).

Now saying this, I remember doing a reality check just last year and finding out many of these new Amazon Fire advancements DID NOT WORK AT ALL because Amazon was feuding with Google again and Amazon Fire products didn't load the current Google drivers, etc.

This Amazon/Google feud is still going, Amazon does NOT COME SOFTWARE COMPLETE OR CURRENT, it remains 3-4 years back in time compared to the rest of the Android world.   And this means the Amazon hardware although it may be current doesn't work as expected.

This situation has prompted Walmart to come out with their own line of tablets that do come with some improved hardware and DO SWING A MODERN 9.0 ANDROID COMPLETE WITH ALL DRIVERS.

Walmart's unit is running the current Android 9.0, but all the internals are the older mini USB standard and the processor and the memory are not as good as the current Fire products that are swinging USB C.   But Amazon with the more modern hardware is still being self-crippled by not using the current Android 9.0 software and drivers.

Walmart will be quick to fix this situation, Walmart will probably have new units out in time for Christmas with modern guts swinging Android 10 as Walmart is attempting to outdo Amazon in all things lately, but this one Walmart effort seems to be working out somewhat better than the rest of  their Amazon beaters ......

So, buy what your are gonna buy anyway, just be aware that better stuff is only a month or so away.  Justin will buy his wife a new Amazon Fire 8" when the time comes  (amazing ain't it -- just how regular this "spontaneous Fire death" occurs, huh?)

My wife is still using her Fire 8" tablet regularly, but her battery acting sorta weak so I am watching this newest Fire 10" as a potential upgrade Christmas present for her for next year.  

Her Fire 8" is jailbroken and it gets Android 9 updates directly from Google, so I doubt she will have this "spontaneous Fire Death" stuff happening to her tablet -- a simple replacement by me due to "poor battery life" is a much more likely occurrence.

Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/13/19 at 22:41:34 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #311 - 10/13/19 at 22:18:18
 

https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/hardware/sifive-ceo-says-risc-v-servers-a...

This is a small update on RISC-V, MIPS and ARM with the first two items being Open Source Open License items and the last item ARM being under the gun a bit from the first two.

MIPS should be now referred to now as "part of" RISC-V as it is being absorbed (the good parts anyway) into the RISC-V group very quickly.

ARM Holdings is feeling a good bit under the gun right now and is changing its license terms to allow their customers to modify ARM standard code and to keep the modifications private.

You still have to pay big bucks to use the "tested and approved" basic ARM designs as the basis for your custom tuned stuff, but you ONLY HAVE TO PAY THE MONEY TO ARM AFTER YOU SHIP YOUR PRODUCTS.

Folks say this is really "no real net change" for how Samsung and Qualcomm have been doing it for years now.   The folks with the technical chops to change standard ARM designs in a beneficial way are really kinda scarce, really.   In any case, what ARM has done just now comes across as as "10 dollars too little and a week too late" to slow the RISC-V momentum that has already occurred.

ARM is right now losing market share on many of their smaller support function chips to free RISC 5 designs and that has to hurt ARM's bottom line in a widespread diffuse manner in 2020.

Article by Data Center Knowledge

RISC-V, the open source processor instruction set architecture (ISA) has been quickly gaining support from companies making chips for embedded devices, and is going to power servers as soon as five years from now.

That's according to Naveed Sherwani, CEO of SiFive, the company founded by three of RISC-V's original developers that's been a primary mover behind the ISA. Its development and market momentum have been picking up so quickly, that Sherwani has had to adjust his projections for when the architecture would hit some big milestones, he told Data Center Knowledge in a recent interview.

Last year Naveed Sherwani used to say he "thought that cellphones are five years away and servers are 10 years away, now he would say that now that cellphones and laptops are two years away, and servers are five years away," . "That is how much it has changed in the last year. I think that is the miracle that is happening in RISC-V, that every month I have to pull in my targets."

Betting on the open source architecture, several big vendors have begun backing the four-year-old SiFive, most recently Qualcomm.

In early June, the startup SiFive announced a $65.4 million Series D funding round led by existing investors Sutter Hill Ventures, Chengwei Capital, Spark Capital, Osage University Partners, and Huami, a smart-wearables company. Coming onboard as a first-time investor was Qualcomm Ventures, the chip giant's venture capital arm. The round brought total investment in SiFive to date to more than $125 million.

In April 2018, Western Digital became an investor, at the same time announcing plans to use RISC-V silicon exclusively in future products. Memory-chip maker Hynix is also an investor.

Sherwani said investment by silicon vendors wasn't accidental but part of SiFive's game plan. According to him, the chip industry has been responsible for half the money the company has raised since he's come onboard.

"It is important that we show our customers worldwide that some of the top companies, like Qualcomm, are not only putting money into us, but they are also using our technology," he said.

Qualcomm "is going to help us develop the technology in the wireless and mobile areas, which are areas that we are not in right now. That is very significant -- both the investment and also that we will be working with them to develop the mobile and wireless areas."

SiFive produces design templates that can be modified to meet specific product needs and provides hand-holding and expertise to help customers bring their designs to market. It was the first company to produce a chip implementing the open source ISA and is a founding member of the RISC-V Foundation, the architecture's nonprofit booster organization.

Speaking more in general terms ......

On a rapid development path, RISC-V is quickly picking up market share in areas where it already has a toehold, according to Sherwani.

"It's many people's opinion that in a matter of a year or so, RISC-V will be the only architecture in the embedded space," he said. "It is sweeping all the other architectures out. It is very simple, it's easy, it is scalable, and it is open source, so a lot of software development is moving very rapidly in that direction."
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/15/19 at 04:38:18 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #312 - 10/14/19 at 02:53:06
 
https://www.notebookcheck.net/The-Ultimate-Core-i7-1065G7-and-Ryzen-7-3700U-2...

There is a BIG whopping graph on this one, I can't put it in the list text box at all and there is no net reference to give you as it is a text based graph being generated off a database.   You just got to click on the red address link to go there and take a look at it.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/The-Ultimate-Core-i7-1065G7-and-Ryzen-7-3700U-2...


The first Ice Lake laptops are finally on store shelves just as Intel had promised back in CES 2019. Dell, HP, and even Razer have all begun shipping their respective premier models each equipped with the 15 W or 25 W 10th gen Core i7-1065G7 designed to replace the last generation Whiskey Lake-U Core i7-8565U and compete directly with the mobile AMD Ryzen U series.

I have said repeatedly that Intel lies a lot, claiming loudly to have made a lot of progress when they actually have NOTHING REAL that is good to show you.

Notebook Check has left the ranks of paid Intel puppets now, they have posted an honest review of the two new "10nm" Intel all in one Laptop Processors, the 15 watt and the 25 watt versions.

What do you need to look carefully at the big graph to see ......   you look to see how Intel only ranks their processors from a cold dead start and the Intel BIOS built into the chipset runs them full out until thermal limits are hit then the BIOS THROTTLES ITSELF very strongly, down to a MUCH SLOWER rate that the chipset can actually support for more than a minute.

The AMD horizontal blue circles (second line from the top) are what you should really focus upon.   Also ignore the fact that Intel won't compare itself to current just released AMD processors, but insists on comparing back at least one generation ---- even using these dirty trick AMD's old stuff still outperforms Intel once the magic minute has passed and everyone is running at steady state.

So, Intel has built a gimmick into their heat controlling BIOS to allow them to show a false performance advantage over their competitors that is pretty much meaningless in the real world that you actually live in once that magic minute is past.

What is now true (and is making Intel quail in their boots at the moment) is that the new Gen 3 AMD stuff coming out now (that was just announced yesterday) picks up enough throughput advantage to make up even a bigger steady state lead, and on top of that it picks up a solid 20% speed upper that makes the Intel cheat "magic minute" hump at the very first pretty much flush with AMD even in the first few seconds of heat build up.

I find it refreshing to have computing magazines are showing the public all of this stuff openly instead of just hiding it like they used to.

This goes a long way towards explaining how the Intel press says Intel is "so much better than AMD" yet the impartial folks like Tom's Hardware and ArsTechnica consistently say something quite different.


===================================================


In line with this Intel 10nm "false performance advantage" folding up under impartial scrutiny, there are now rumors flying around that Intel's main builder/customers don't want anything to do with this very very expensive yet half arsed all over again Intel 10nm.   14nm gives the same performance and costs a LOT less .......

Now Intel has supposedly had to drop all their rapid expansion plans to go across the board with their version of 10nm because it simply doesn't offer any real advantage over the current Intel 14nm and Intel 10nm certainly is no competition to anything built by AMD and accordingly at this stage of things none of the Intel builders want any part of it.   This article says it will be year 2022 before you see anything that is functionally better than the Intel 14nm stuff out of Intel.

https://www.tweaktown.com/news/68127/intel-cancels-10nm-desktop-14nm-hold-unt...

Loud screams coming from Intel today tend to say there is a little fire burning over there underneath that dense Intel smoke screen ..... and Intel's hand is being held in that fire by their own builders.

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-yes-there-will-be-10nm-desktop-cpus

...... and yes, Intel has admitted to Tom's that they have both low yield and low performance issues yet to overcome with their 10nm products.  Tom's Hardware is quoting inside sources that say that widespread Intel 10nm will likely be delayed until sometimes in 2021 which smells like 10nm will never arrive as Intel will have real 7nm production by that time off their new 7nm equipment that they just ordered and that will be delivered and hooked up and up and running by 2021.

Me, I say Intel lies a lot, and spending your time paying attention to what Intel says right now is really kinda futile ......   just watch what they really do.


Back to top
« Last Edit: 10/21/19 at 07:32:41 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Screenshot_at_2019-10-21_10-29-56.png

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #313 - 10/15/19 at 05:01:42
 

https://www.techradar.com/news/intel-plans-to-outmuscle-amd-with-dollar3-bill...

OK, Intel is hollering in pain again, something about a hand caught in a fire and in all the screaming and hollering something real may have crept out in all the crying and blubbering Intel is doing at the moment.

Just like how they spent 10 billion dollars trying to take over cell phone processors, Intel is now going to try to  BUY a place in Consumer and Mainframe computing by "price supporting" their goods using the mucho dinero bucks they got from their massive price gouging efforts these past few years ......

Intel may be looking to combine the effects of price cuts – which it is definitely making in some measure, as we’ve mentioned – with any strain on the 7nm stock supply that AMD may experience due to the 7nm shortage, because the latter is another potentially key factor in how the CPU wars will play out.

We’ve already seen Ryzen chips struggling to meet demand levels at the high-end, and with rumors flying around of more 7nm shortages that are coming – issues compounded by the popularity of the iPhone 11 – Intel may be hoping to land a telling double blow on pricing and supply here.

Although ultimately, at least in the short-term, downward pressure on the prices of CPUs will be no bad thing for consumers, of course. The long-term competitiveness of the processor market might be another matter, though, if AMD begins to get outmuscled in this kind of fashion.


In short, look out for the Intel Black Bag of tricks to make a re-appearance, similar to the nasty stuff that Intel did to Qualcomm two years ago when rumor has it that Intel supposedly may have arranged for a hostile take over attempt to be made by a third party.

AMD is simply doing too good of a job at 7nm, and Intel is caught with their hand in the fire and Intel is now gonna get all nasty on AMD at this point in time because it is their last recourse.

AMD's best move is to move VERY QUICKLY down to 5nm and fully utilize the TSMC 15 layer burn technologies just as soon as TSMC has it available for them to use.   Hanging around at the same lithography level that Intel is moving into isn't the smartest place to be .....
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/20/19 at 06:33:32 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Oldfeller--FSO
Serious Thumper
ModSquad
*****
Offline

Hobby is now
"concentrated
neuropany"

Posts: 12638
Fayetteville, NC
Gender: male
Re: 2019 -- new Intel failures & successes
Reply #314 - 10/19/19 at 21:49:31
 

AMD is rolling into the ......

F
U
T
U
R
E

...... while Intel stays stuck 2-3 generations in the past.
   

In the last week Intel has come up a crapper with their brown vapor 10nm across the board plans again, and Intel has run out their 7nm plans into 2022 for their 7nm implementations.   This puts Intel firmly 2-3 multiple generations stuck in the past again while phones and Android march quickly into the future, with AMD going along with them instead of with Intel.

Ask Global Foundry what happens when you follow Intel's lead instead of Android's -- oh, that's right, Global Foundry only took a big 2 years of stagnation to become totally passe' and to drop away from all relevance.   Now you can buy parts of Global if you want them, the Arab owners have it all for sale now.

AMD's next Gen 3 design for 2020 is in the can now at a 20% throughput and 10% speed improvement and production has already begun on it.   Intel cannot even start to compete with this even using their largest mainframe chipsets run up in over-voltage speed using all the overclocking tricks the gamer - hobby boys have built up over the years.  

Watch the 16 core Ryzen announcements for the first fruits of AMD Gen 3 --- the new test results are coming in as we speak.

AMD Gen 4 is 80% design complete at first early production level of 5nm (15 burn levels) using 5 new production lines that TSMC has already contracted with ASML to purchase.   First lines have been contracted and are being built now.   This rolls into place in 2021.   Apple is footing the bill for the first new TSMC 5nm lithography lines as they are wont to do as they WANT and NEED that critical 1-2 years worth of tech edge over everybody else.

AMD Gen 5 is also under early design using the very newest ASML scanners that are being designed for Apple and TSMC which will be 5nm with 24 burn levels instead of just 15 burn levels.  This is planned for 2022-2023 and AMD has their two leapfrogging design groups functionally keeping the AMD improvement pace up there at an Intel crushing level.

There are prototype 3nm ASML high energy scanners being designed and built, Apple wants them ready for 3-4 years from now and we all know that Apple generally gets what they want since they are paying for it.  AMD will have a design team working on that as soon as the specs become known.
Back to top
 
« Last Edit: 10/20/19 at 06:41:21 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

Former Savage Owner
  IP Logged
Pages: 1 ... 19 20 21 22 23 ... 31
Send Topic Print


« Home

 
« Home
SuzukiSavage.com
05/08/24 at 13:59:04



General CategoryThe Cafe › 2020 -- new Intel failures & successes


SuzukiSavage.com » Powered by YaBB 2.2!
YaBB © 2000-2007. All Rights Reserved.