Zhaoxin Displays x86-Compatible KaiXian KX-6000: 8 Cores, 3 GHz, 16 nm FinFET
Zhaoxin, a joint venture between Via Technologies and the Chinese government, this week for the first time displayed its upcoming x86-compatible CPU, the KaiXian KX-6000. The SoC features eight cores running at 3 GHz and increases performance over its predecessor by at least 50%.
The KaiXian KX-6000 is a successor to the KX-5000 CPU launched earlier this year. Both chips integrate eight-core x86-64 cores with 8 MB of L2 cache, a DirectX 11.1-capable iGPU with an up-to-date display controller, a dual-channel DDR4-3200 memory controller, contemporary I/O interfaces (PCIe, SATA, USB, etc), and so on. The key differences between the KaiXian KX-5000 and the KaiXian KX-6000 are frequencies and manufacturing technology: the former is produced using TSMC's 28 nm fabrication process and runs at up to 2 GHz, whereas the latter is made using TSMC's 16 nm technology and operates at up to 3 GHz. Zhaoxin claims that the Kaixian KX-6000 offers compute performance comparable to that of Intel's 7th Generation Core i5 processor, which is a quad-core non-Hyper-Threaded CPU. Obviously, performance claims like that have to be verified, yet a 50% performance bump over the direct predecessor already seems beefy enough.
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(Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Tuesday September 25 2018, @05:25AM
I once worked for a Bahamian hedge fund - The Bahamas because there are no taxes there. They had about twenty employees with me as a remote contractor.
The - very very wealthy - owner of the hedge fund got his windows box quite severely pwned, so he bought all his employees a second box purely for the Internet, and has his people mount all their work computers in a lockable rack with Ethernet KVMs.
There is _one_ tax - a usurous 50% import duty under which the native bahamians suffer. I found some joy in this guy having to pay that duty for all those second computers, the KVMs and the rackmount.
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]