- Joined
- Nov 15, 2021
It would be used in a home server to replace one with a Xeon E3-1220v2
Ah, yeah, then for a hundred bucks? Good deal.
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It would be used in a home server to replace one with a Xeon E3-1220v2
I'm going to assume this is on Linux? I have used Rocm on Windows and it was not performant. Using latest versions on Linux (dual boot, same hardware) the difference is very, very noticeable.I have a 7900XTX and it works ok for the big name AI like LLM and StableDiffusion. A bit slower than I'd expect though.
I'm quite keen to see the next gen. I'm not expecting wild difference but I am expecting it to be a nice upgrade. Especially for laptops. I'm still on 1st gen Zen (although a nice one) and I've been holding off for sometime from upgrading. A nice little Zen 5 whole system rebuild would suit me well.
Strix Point = 4x Zen 5, 8x Zen 5c, 16 CUs RDNA 3+. 128-bit LPDDR5X-7500
Strix Halo (top) = 6-16x Zen 5 cores (1-2 chiplets shared with desktop/server), up to 40 CUs RDNA 3+, 256-bit LPDDR5X-8000, 32 MB Infinity Cache
Strix Halo ("LP") = 6-8x Zen 5 cores (1 chiplet), 20 CUs RDNA 3+, 128-bit LPDDR5X, maybe the cache
So Strix Halo has double the bus width, 6.7% faster memory speed, and the benefit of L3 cache dedicated to the graphics which increases the "effective" bandwidth. Although it isn't monolithic, it might do surprisingly well in low power scenarios from clocking a lot of CUs very low. If AMD makes a ghetto 128-bit version, it could still retain some advantages over Strix Point such as faster memory and the Infinity Cache.
Kraken Point is an 8-core (4+4) "little" version of Strix Point. Probably 8 CUs.
All of these will have an XDNA 2.0 NPU, now rumored up to 50 TOPS for Strix Point, 60 TOPS for Strix Halo. The difference is simply from being capable of clocking higher.
Sonoma Valley may be a platform compatible replacement for Mendocino, with 4x Zen 5c cores and not much else known. It may be made on Samsung 4nm instead of TSMC, which could make it a great option for cheap PCs that doesn't divert wafer supply from premium products. Moving from Zen 2 to Zen 5c would yield an absurd IPC increase, perhaps over 50%, with new features like AVX-512 support.
We don't know how much of an improvement RDNA 3+ will be, but it does introduce some changes that are intended for RDNA 4, and you can read about them here.
I'm going to assume this is on Linux? I have used Rocm on Windows and it was not performant.
Well yes, but person I was replying to said "I have a 7900XTX" so I figured they weren't a data centre.I can assure you the Windows version of ROCm is barely more than an afterthought. The datacenter hardware is all running Linux.
To be fair I have better hardware than most datacenters.Well yes, but person I was replying to said "I have a 7900XTX" so I figured they weren't a data centre.
Well yes, but person I was replying to said "I have a 7900XTX" so I figured they weren't a data centre.
It depends on what you're looking at.I'm badly in need of a new setup.
I've heard that 'convention season' starts in June, with tons of new releases - and old stock will plunge this summer.
C/D ?
For real? That's pretty funny lol.Pretty much every PC community site right now is flooded with people having melties because they've tried to wait out the current market and have instead been rewarded with higher baseline prices.
Seems a little odd. The RK3588 seems to have 4x PCIe3.0 lanes which means each NVMe likely only gets 1 lane, which isn't bad, but is like 1/4 the possible speed of NVMe on PCIe 3.0 Then it only has 2.5G, so there's a massive bottleneck from the possible 32Gbit/second possible even with the limited PCIe lanes on the storage.A friend of mine was talking about this: https://www.amazon.com/WayPonDEV-CM3588-NAS-Kit-Mali-G610/dp/B0CQZN4LSS , anyone have one?
My ghetto NAS is nearly filled and I cannot possibly cram anymore drives into it, I already have M.2 PCIE adapters in it and it's been getting really hot when I'm doing editing for an extended period of time which already makes me nervous. It would probably cost me the same amount of money to build another ghetto NAS out of unused hardware as this board, so I'm thinking about trying it out but I don't want to buy something I'll end up trashing.
Yea, I even 3D printed custom air channels and installed dedicated 80mm fans. It's just very cramped and two drives in particular seem to get much hotter than the others. I was going to swap the chassis out eventually as a last hope.I assume you have heatsinks on your existing NAS NVMe, and good airflow?
NVMe does run hot generally.Yea, I even 3D printed custom air channels and installed dedicated 80mm fans. It's just very cramped and two drives in particular seem to get much hotter than the others. I was going to swap the chassis out eventually as a last hope.
Lmfao, no matter if AMD or Intel, ASUS always finds a way to fuck up your CPUsounds like MSI and ASUS are the major culprits here:
Intel's blaming motherboards & overclockers for running out of spec: https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-i...e-to-13-14th-gen-core-i9-cpu-stability-issues.