“
Before closing out this piece I would be remiss if I did not mention one of the most eye-brow raising rumors that we’ve come across and it’s this. AMD is allegedly going to be raising the bar once again next year by pushing the mainstream core count from 8 cores to a maximum of 12 to 16 cores on the AM4 socket.
The rumor out there is that we’re looking at 16 core Ryzen 7 chips as the new norm in 2019. However, according to private conversations we’ve had with incredibly knowledgeable people in the industry the actual core count figure might be closer to 12 cores. With that being said, anyway you slice it that’s still a LOT of cores. An unprecedented number of cores for a mainstream consumer-class socket in fact.
As with all rumors though, please remember to take this with a grain of salt.”
https://wccftech.com/rumor-amd-brin...roadmap-into-2020-detailed-zen-2-zen-3-zen-5/
The ramifications of having 12c/24t or 16c/32t in consumer grade high end CPUs is crazy. I’d have thought you have diminishing returns beyond 8c/16t for consumers but I guess we won’t actuall know until it becomes mainstream. If this is true and X2 and PS5 are based on Ryzen 7 Zen 2 we could have our baseline in terms of gaming shoot way up. I’m not sold on it yet, but given that we going from 14nm to 7nm I guess they had more die space to theoretically double the core count in the same socket.
The other rumor is that Ryzen 3000 is supposed to be able to hit 5Ghz.
I'm not that optimistic, but I am at least hoping for boosts beyond 4.2-4.5 and minimum 3.8 base clock.
https://segmentnext.com/2018/03/07/amd-ryzen-3000-series-cpus/
"AMD Ryzen 2000 series is around the corner and we have been getting some leaks regarding the upcoming lineup. You can check out details regarding that here. We also got some leaks concerning the 2700X as well as the 2600 which feature the same number of cores and threads but higher clock speeds. Now we are getting word that the AMD Ryzen 3000 series will hit 5 GHz using the 7nm process.
The first generation AMD Ryzen die was 213 mm² large and according to expectations, AMD Ryzen 3000 series die will be 100 mm². This will reduce the cost of production and will also provide the potential of increased core and thread count, which is something where AMD has the edge. A 5 GHz clock speed translates into 40% better performance which is very realistic and doable.
While this is something to keep an eye out for, you need to know that the AMD Ryzen 3000 series will not be coming out before early 2019. These are expected numbers so take this information with a grain of salt. AMD has delivered more than the expected performance in the past, at least when it comes to CPUs. Keeping that in mind it is possible that the upcoming AMD Ryzen 3000 series CPUs could provide better performance than just 40%."
https://www.techpowerup.com/242148/globalfoundries-7-nm-to-enable-up-to-2-7x-smaller-dies-5-ghz-cpus
https://www.anandtech.com/show/1243...h-dr-gary-patton-cto-of-globalfoundries#three
I added this last bit to the original post to address the complaints about clockspeed.
Before closing out this piece I would be remiss if I did not mention one of the most eye-brow raising rumors that we’ve come across and it’s this. AMD is allegedly going to be raising the bar once again next year by pushing the mainstream core count from 8 cores to a maximum of 12 to 16 cores on the AM4 socket.
The rumor out there is that we’re looking at 16 core Ryzen 7 chips as the new norm in 2019. However, according to private conversations we’ve had with incredibly knowledgeable people in the industry the actual core count figure might be closer to 12 cores. With that being said, anyway you slice it that’s still a LOT of cores. An unprecedented number of cores for a mainstream consumer-class socket in fact.
As with all rumors though, please remember to take this with a grain of salt.”
https://wccftech.com/rumor-amd-brin...roadmap-into-2020-detailed-zen-2-zen-3-zen-5/
The ramifications of having 12c/24t or 16c/32t in consumer grade high end CPUs is crazy. I’d have thought you have diminishing returns beyond 8c/16t for consumers but I guess we won’t actuall know until it becomes mainstream. If this is true and X2 and PS5 are based on Ryzen 7 Zen 2 we could have our baseline in terms of gaming shoot way up. I’m not sold on it yet, but given that we going from 14nm to 7nm I guess they had more die space to theoretically double the core count in the same socket.
The other rumor is that Ryzen 3000 is supposed to be able to hit 5Ghz.
I'm not that optimistic, but I am at least hoping for boosts beyond 4.2-4.5 and minimum 3.8 base clock.
https://segmentnext.com/2018/03/07/amd-ryzen-3000-series-cpus/
"AMD Ryzen 2000 series is around the corner and we have been getting some leaks regarding the upcoming lineup. You can check out details regarding that here. We also got some leaks concerning the 2700X as well as the 2600 which feature the same number of cores and threads but higher clock speeds. Now we are getting word that the AMD Ryzen 3000 series will hit 5 GHz using the 7nm process.
The first generation AMD Ryzen die was 213 mm² large and according to expectations, AMD Ryzen 3000 series die will be 100 mm². This will reduce the cost of production and will also provide the potential of increased core and thread count, which is something where AMD has the edge. A 5 GHz clock speed translates into 40% better performance which is very realistic and doable.
While this is something to keep an eye out for, you need to know that the AMD Ryzen 3000 series will not be coming out before early 2019. These are expected numbers so take this information with a grain of salt. AMD has delivered more than the expected performance in the past, at least when it comes to CPUs. Keeping that in mind it is possible that the upcoming AMD Ryzen 3000 series CPUs could provide better performance than just 40%."
https://www.techpowerup.com/242148/globalfoundries-7-nm-to-enable-up-to-2-7x-smaller-dies-5-ghz-cpus
https://www.anandtech.com/show/1243...h-dr-gary-patton-cto-of-globalfoundries#three
I added this last bit to the original post to address the complaints about clockspeed.
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