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#101 |
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#102 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Toulouse
Posts: 4,133
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you will have to wait a long time for Haswell-E.
Haswell will coexist with Ivybridge-E and we don't know anything about a 2011 socket successor or any future CPU on that socket. Haswell might be skipped, Ivybridge-E will be the high end till 2014 then maybe Intel moves to ddr4 for its high end and servers, where ddr4 may be useful in getting truckload amounts of memory. I've read that memory chips use a ridiculously large amount of power in datacenters, by the way. imagine racks upon racks of PCs loaded with 256GB ram, 10Gb networking, loads of VMs, sprawling databases etc. so, on the consumer side, Intel releases a stop-gap socket, the 1150, which still supports ddr3. but servers (and 2011 is a server socket, in addition to high end desktop) need ddr4 sooner and Intel might not bother with new ddr3 sockets. Last edited by Blazkowicz; 16-Sep-2012 at 17:48. |
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#103 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Europe
Posts: 1,230
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It will take quite a while before you see any significant use of an 8C CPU for gaming.
__________________
"A Revolutionary Age is an age of action; the present age is an age of advertisement, or an age of publicity: nothing ever happens, but there is immediate publicity everywhere." - Søren Kierkegaard http://culture.vg/ | http://storyofstuff.com/ | http://www.chomsky.info/ | http://www.artrenewal.org/ |
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#104 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Toulouse
Posts: 4,133
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Intel doesn't want to sell you an 8 core CPU with a H61 chipset or its next gen equivalent while they could milk you for a X79 instead.
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#105 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: NoVA
Posts: 213
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Found the links to the webcasts:
http://intelstudios.edgesuite.net/id...S001/index.htm http://intelstudios.edgesuite.net/id...S001/index.htm |
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#106 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,544
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Quote:
It does indeed looks like Haswell can interrupt in the middle of its gather instruction with the result of a partially completed gather stored in registers (data+mask). Which then begs the question how they've done that. Cheers
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I'm pink, therefore I'm spam |
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#107 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 320
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#108 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Toulouse
Posts: 4,133
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Yes Knight Corner is like Intel throwing the usual x86 SIMD extensions out the window, and branching to do something different. I don't know enough to tell what was thrown out (e.g. does it support SSE2 or not, even x87 etc., on non-FP stuff does it even meet i686)
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#109 | |
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Ohio frog
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Ohio, USA
Posts: 4,172
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Quote:
As for mobile, let wait for the pain next year with OoO Atom shipping on 22nm process, I would bet it is (finally) going to hurt). EDIT +1 to my self the focus on Apple is really on the verge of F-Boyism on that one, crazy. Comparing ultrabook and laptop to tablet... that is non sensical and short sighted. Next year Intel will have awesome and I would bet unmatched products to power Windows 8 (which in turns will have matured) to power "serious" tablets ( I mean akin the high end MSFT so a viable substitute to laptops), thanks to the new atom dual and quad core configuration supporting 4GB of ram and more and so on.
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What's trying to be a bunch of presentations PS360 youtube channel Sebbbi about virtual texturing Tuned EADGCF and liking it :) Last edited by liolio; 05-Oct-2012 at 18:31. |
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#110 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,544
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Quote:
Apple acquired significant CPU design know-how when they bought PA Semi and Intrinsity. Some of these guys know how to build high power processors. Can A6 compete against Haswell in desktops and high power laptops ? Hell no. But in a Mac Book Air form factor it might just be competitive with Intel's offerings. Intel is threatened by this; Notice how much of the Haswell material is about power savings rather than outright compute performance. I can't wait to see the next iPad with an A6 in a larger power envelope. Cheers
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I'm pink, therefore I'm spam |
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#111 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
__________________
Apple: China -- Brutal leadership done right.
Google: United States -- Somewhat democratic. Microsoft: Russia -- Big and bloated. Linux: EU -- Diverse and broke. |
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#112 | |
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PM
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 1,371
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Quote:
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#113 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 366
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It's interesting to note that there are more chip designers who worked on K8 working at Apple than there are working at AMD. PA Semi was one of the favourite destinations for chip designers when they fled AMD.
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#114 |
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Senior Member
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Krait seems to be a good proxy for A15.
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#115 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 1,553
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#116 |
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Senior Member
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Which is why I used the word proxy. I expect Krait and A15 will end up rather close.
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#117 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 1,553
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Based on what exactly? Why would you expect Krait to represent Cortex-A15 any better than A6? If anything the one released closer in time would be more likely to be representative wouldn't it?
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#118 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 366
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A15 and Krait both have 3-wide decode and 128-bit FPU, but that's pretty much where the similarities end. Krait has a shorter pipeline and a low-latency, really weird cache subsystem. In comparison, A15 will have higher latencies and higher clocks. Whether the power consumption will blow up when it's taken to those clocks is a whole another (and as of yet unknown) issue.
I don't think that Krait is in any way a good proxy for A15 performance. In fact, I simply think that there isn't enough published data on A15 to make any sort of informed judgement yet. |
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#119 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,544
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No exact science was used in my estimate, I was going by the claimed 40% IPC improvement of A15 vs A9.
The interesting point is of course how power consumption compares with Krait and A15 at a given performance level. Cheers
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#120 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,544
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Quote:
Wiki says Krait is OOO, but I can't find that claim anywhere in any of the Qualcomm PR material. The only immidiate difference seems to be the length of the pipeline, 11 stages for Krait and 15 stages for A15. The long pipeline indicate a higher operating frequency target, and together with all the virtualization support ARM has added, it seems to me A15 is really targetted more at low power servers than mobile SOCs. I expect A15 to be faster than Krait, but burn more power being so. Cheers
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I'm pink, therefore I'm spam |
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#121 | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 1,553
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Quote:
Note that a lot of Cortex-A15's long pipeline is in a frontend that can be partially bypassed if code is running from the loop buffer. Quote:
You have to consider that, aside from the benchmark being abject garbage, there's just less room to grow with Dhrystone. It all fits in L1 cache, uses pretty predictable branches, and spends a lot of time in library functions that can be hand optimized. So Cortex-A15's strengths aren't going to benefit it as much as it'll benefit real programs. |
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#122 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
By proxy I mean <20% difference. YMMV with this metric. |
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#123 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 1,553
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20% difference is good for a proxy? Seriously? Do you even have anything really showing Scorpion to A9 being a typical < 20% at same clock speed?
Scorpion is much closer to A8 than A9, making the latter comparison over the former seems totally disingenuous :/ |
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#124 |
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Senior Member
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Good enough for me. It's a pretty bad metric if you are doing an in depth comparison, no doubt about that. But in terms of the user experience with actual apps, I think this much difference is not perceptible.
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#125 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,544
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Quote:
The 50% performance improvement is with frequency improvements AFAICT (at a fixed power consumption level) The 100% FP is only for SIMD code. The A9 doesn't track data dependencies on NEON registers. Using NEON instructions thus effectively turn the A9 into an in-order processor. The A15 has two remap tables, one for ARM registers and one for NEON registers. That and the wider datapaths is going to improve SIMD code immensely, but much less for regular FP code. Cheers
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