Processors

Intel mocks amd epyc saying they are desktop dies glued together

Table of contents:

Anonim

Lately, Intel is showing a behavior more typical of a five-year-old than of a company that leads the semiconductor sector and cares about its users. Now Intel has messed with the AMD EPYC processors saying they are not up to scratch for being stuck desktop dies along with latency issues and lack of ecosystem.

Intel disparages AMD EPYC

Intel's latest presentation has been an embarrassment to others in which it has dedicated itself to discrediting its rival, perhaps they have been accustomed to lack of competition for too many years and have been a little nervous to see that AMD's Zen architecture is better than what was expected. EPYC are AMD's newest processors for servers, impressive chips with up to 32 Zen cores that will offer massive computing power. For Intel these do not stop being a botch because it has baptized them as simple glued desktop dies.

We remind the gentlemen of Intel that they were the first to make fashionable that of sticking dies inside a processor, right now the Pentium D and the Core 2 Quad come to mind that did not use a monolithic design but were dies pasted, something they also did with the Lynnefields in which the integrated GPU was a separate die from the CPU that was pasted next to it, because it will not be so botched when you have done it yourself before?

AMD Launches New EPYC 7000 Processors with Up to 32 Cores

Intel has also messed with AMD Ryzen's SMT technology to say that it is worse than the HT of its Xeon, the funny thing is that to demonstrate it they have taken a Xeon of 2, 200 euros and compared it to the Ryzen 7 1800 which is worth almost five times less. It seems that for fear they have lowered the frequency of both processors to 2.2 GHz, it will not be that the Ryzen is put above us and we are what we are ridiculous…

They have also mocked that the latencies of Ryzen processors are worse and the lack of an ecosystem that is able to get the most out of it, in the latter we agree Intel. AMD has introduced a new architecture very different from the previous one and therefore it takes a while until the software is optimized to get the most out of it. In the other part we have Intel that has been selling the same processors for about seven years, so the platform is already highly optimized.

AMD Ryzen 7 1800X Review in Spanish (Complete Review)

Source: wccftech

Processors

Editor's choice

Back to top button