AMD's Zen 5-based EPYC 7005-series 'Turin' CPUs are expected to be power hungry.
Rumour: AMD Looking at 600W cTDP for 5th Gen EPYC 'Turin' CPUs : Read more
Rumour: AMD Looking at 600W cTDP for 5th Gen EPYC 'Turin' CPUs : Read more
It's going to be 256 (rumor) cores for 600W (rumor) replacing 64 cores at 280W.I guess the industry is just heading into high power designs, whether we like it or not, for everything. I hope they also introduce a solution to the energy problem around the world =/
No, not really.It's going to be 256 (rumor) cores for 600W (rumor) replacing 64 cores at 280W.
High power design doesn't mean that it burns more power per performance, if the rumors are true you could get 4 times the cores for only twice the power, that IS how you tackle the energy problem.
Usually companies go with either a power budged or a performance budget, they don't just add as much as possible without any rhyme or reason.No, not really.
You're still using more energy for more performance; sure it's more efficient, but it is still more energy. The processing needs are growing and to accommodate that growth, chip manufacturers can do it at the expense of even more energy consumption; that's another way of phrasing it. Thing is, can the energy generation side of things keep up? It has already been proven that most of the current infrastructure around the world is kind of tight and there needs to be more producing plants.
Regards.
Yeah, I remember 10 yeards ago they were all like "meh, I could do with about half the performance". LOLNowadays operators of hyperscale cloud datacenters as well as enterprises with demanding workloads want to have the maximum performance they can get
Yeah, the power is one thing, but a lot of businesses are considering the density, as in how many CPUs/GPUs you can fit in a rack.Usually companies go with either a power budged or a performance budget, they don't just add as much as possible without any rhyme or reason.
Yes the need for energy due to computing will keep rising, that's a different conversation, this is still more efficient so it's still more better.
Not all, and certainly not the type of company that has limited space and has growing processing needs (data centers gallore; cloud or not). They will fit as many CPUs as they can fit and meet their performance goals. They are willing to modify entire buildings to accommodate whatever power and cooling requirements need to be filled. If you can fit 100 of the new ones to replace the old 100, you will do it. They're netting you 10X more performance at 5X more power (to say something). Very efficient, but still netting an increase in power that has to come out of somewhere.Usually companies go with either a power budged or a performance budget, they don't just add as much as possible without any rhyme or reason.
Yes the need for energy due to computing will keep rising, that's a different conversation, this is still more efficient so it's still more better.
Heh, a troll quoting me made me notice your reply.Generally datacenters are built around an expected power output and cooling capacity. Big undertaking to expand. You have to get the power company to upgrade your capacity, gear, meters, etc. And sometimes they don't have the capacity on the line to do so and will just say no. That is when datacenters move to new facilities, or customers move and the data center finds smaller customers.
More efficiency just means they can get more $ per square foot with potentially the same expenses. Though you might have to tack on more administrators with more cores/tasks/applications/services running. At least until you hit a bandwidth limit with the ISP.