![]() M entioned o n 06/20/22 in Tech Linked ( 3:54) M entioned o n 06/08/22 in Tech Linked ( 1:20 ) M entioned o n 05/25/22 in Tech Linked ( 5:24) M entioned o n 05/20/22 in Tech Linked ( 0:13 ) M entioned o n 05/18/22 in Tech Linked ( 4:25) M entioned o n 12/30/20 in Tech Linked ( 2:17 ) M entioned o n 12/30/20 in Tech Linked ( 0:14) M entioned o n 10/21/20 in Tech Linked ( 1:22) M entioned o n 10/16/20 in Tech Linked ( 4:06) But at least in the server market they should remain highly competitive for quite a while. I'm not sure though if this will be enough to surpass Alder Lake much less Raptor Lake. How much of that is due to higher clock speeds is yet to be confirmed. Anyway, it appears that the single threaded increase is around 15% as per AMD's own slides, slightly higher here. Usually this happens a few days before a revealing event, so might not be a big deal, but for the people who won't be able to watch the livestream it could prove to be useful. Maybe we might get a leak or two before the event. Hopefully we'll get concrete IPC numbers then, but for now this will do. I'm assuming this is happening because we're approaching the 29th, which is the livestream event AMD is hosting regarding the series CPUs. Where compared to Raptor Lake there seems to be a new leak every week regarding performance in various benchmarks. It's nice to finally start seeing leaks regarding Zen 4 performance. The OPN code of 100-000000997-01 most likely corresponds to the flagship AMD EPYC 9664 (not 9654P, which is designed for single-socket) with a max TDP of 400W according to existing leaks. This leak does not precisely reveal which EPYC CPU has been tested, but the OPN code of 100-000000997-01 is listed. ![]() Furthermore, the system was using 755.54GB of DDR5 memory, which undoubtedly gave the Zen4 Genoa system a small boost in the leaked Geekbench V5 CPU tests on Linux. Both CPUs reportedly ran at 3.51GHz clock speed. ![]() ![]() What we do know is that only one AMD architecture now features 96-cores and that’s EPYC Genoa based on Zen4. Using an EPYC 7763 SKU, featuring a total of 128 cores and similar 3.53GHz clock speed Genoa (Zen4) was 17% faster in the single-core test and 28% faster in multicore tests, with a single-core score of 1,460 and a multi-core result of 96,535. One simply should compare the Zen4 Genoa system to a random EPYC Milan (Zen3) system because dual-socket platform was used. ![]()
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