Amd demonstrates all the power of his new epyc 'rome' in c
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AMD has released a new live demo of its second generation AMD EPYC "Rome" prototype with 64 7nm CPUs. The demo used the floating point intensive C-Ray tool to render images.
AMD EPYC 7nm with 64 cores outperforms 2 Intel Xeon Platinum 8180M
To demonstrate the full power of its new EPYC 'Rome' chip, AMD conducted a live comparison against 2 Intel Xeon Platinum 8180M CPUs. The systems in the demo generated a total of 3 images; one 1080p (HD), one 1440p (QHD), and finally a 2160p (4K) image. The C-Ray version used on both systems during the demo is 1.2.0. The AMD 1P system was clearly faster than the Intel 2P system in this demo.
The testing platforms
The AMD EPYC 'Rome' 'prototype' consisted of a 64-core CPU, about 8 32GB DDR4 2667 DIMMs, 1TB SSD Samsung EVO 970, and the Ubuntu 18.04 operating system.
The Intel platform consisted of a Supermicro SYS-1029U-TRTP chassis, 2 Intel Xeon Platinum 8180M CPU @ 2.50GHz with a total of 56 cores and 112 threads, 24xDIMM 32BG = 768GB @ 2666 MHz, SSD Samsung 970 EVO 1TB - NVME, and Ubuntu 18.04.
At the end of the video we see the clenched fists of one of one of AMD's engineers, Amit Mehra, who has to be very happy with the work done. The second-generation EPYC chip platform is expected to be arriving this year, to which the company places all confidence to gain ground in the server market.
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