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posted by CoolHand on Monday November 05 2018, @10:04PM   Printer-friendly
from the revived-competition dept.

Intel announces Cascade Lake Xeons: 48 cores and 12-channel memory per socket

Intel has announced the next family of Xeon processors that it plans to ship in the first half of next year. The new parts represent a substantial upgrade over current Xeon chips, with up to 48 cores and 12 DDR4 memory channels per socket, supporting up to two sockets.

These processors will likely be the top-end Cascade Lake processors; Intel is labelling them "Cascade Lake Advanced Performance," with a higher level of performance than the Xeon Scalable Processors (SP) below them. The current Xeon SP chips use a monolithic die, with up to 28 cores and 56 threads. Cascade Lake AP will instead be a multi-chip processor with multiple dies contained with in a single package. AMD is using a similar approach for its comparable products; the Epyc processors use four dies in each package, with each die having 8 cores.

The switch to a multi-chip design is likely driven by necessity: as the dies become bigger and bigger it becomes more and more likely that they'll contain a defect. Using several smaller dies helps avoid these defects. Because Intel's 10nm manufacturing process isn't yet good enough for mass market production, the new Xeons will continue to use a version of the company's 14nm process. Intel hasn't yet revealed what the topology within each package will be, so the exact distribution of those cores and memory channels between chips is as yet unknown. The enormous number of memory channels will demand an enormous socket, currently believed to be a 5903 pin connector.

Intel also announced tinier 4-6 core E-2100 Xeons with ECC memory support.

Meanwhile, AMD is holding a New Horizon event on Nov. 6, where it is expected to announce 64-core Epyc processors.

Related: AMD Epyc 7000-Series Launched With Up to 32 Cores
AVX-512: A "Hidden Gem"?
Intel's Skylake-SP vs AMD's Epyc
Intel Teases 28 Core Chip, AMD Announces Threadripper 2 With Up to 32 Cores
TSMC Will Make AMD's "7nm" Epyc Server CPUs
Intel Announces 9th Generation Desktop Processors, Including a Mainstream 8-Core CPU


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by takyon on Monday November 05 2018, @10:25PM (2 children)

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Monday November 05 2018, @10:25PM (#758227) Journal

    This is the second time in the last few months that Intel has frantically tried to divert attention from AMD's own product announcements:

    Intel Teases 28 Core Chip, AMD Announces Threadripper 2 With Up to 32 Cores [soylentnews.org]

    Competition is fine, but what we've gotten from Intel are expensive, hot [tomshardware.com] distractions.

    How hot is this thing going to run? Why couldn't they glue two of their 28-cores together?

    It's funny that they compare it to the previous generation Epyc the day before the new Epyc will probably be announced. 240% faster in certain workloads (hot-running AVX-512 I guess). Except AMD is probably going to double the core count and increase per-core performance by maybe 25% (+10-15% IPC + clock speed increases), resulting in a theoretical 150% performance increase for Epyc.

    With that said, we can praise Intel for following AMD and using multiple dies to increase core counts and get around bad yields. We knew it was coming, and it's the smart move.

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  • (Score: 2) by linkdude64 on Monday November 05 2018, @11:32PM (1 child)

    by linkdude64 (5482) on Monday November 05 2018, @11:32PM (#758264)

    Would mod up +1 Insightful...or maybe +1 Funny for the "hot distractions" bit, that made me chuckle. I was almost thinking it would be a link to their Computex incident with the standalone AC unit. So surreal, and strangely satisfying, to see the titan falling. I'm sure it will catch itself before long, but for now I'm content to watch....and invest a little in AMD. I bought at $12/share.