- Joined
- Aug 28, 2019
I agree. I'm keeping the options open because I don't have any idea how powerful integrated machine learning accelerators would be in next-gen consoles or their contemporary desktop CPUs. Could be anywhere from 50 to 1000 TOPS, and Sony and Microsoft could go their own separate ways with one treating it like an afterthought and the other going hard.I think that advances in process node technology are going to primarily drive consolidation of all chip features onto SoCs. Apple is already there, with M2 Ultra just being two M2 Max chips mashed together. Sound cards are dead, dGPUs are dying, and consumer-grade discrete NPUs are stillborn. You may be old enough to remember when floating-point units were dedicated accelerators:
But in a worst case scenario, a discrete RTX 10090 Stupor could handle both graphics and AI.
I probably already sperged about this, but I'd like to see Intel put their best mobile chip on a desktop socket to challenge AMD's desktop APUs. 8700G is rumored to be unveiled at CES and released January 31. That's a real 1080p iGPU.If anyone reading this thread has a recent iGPU, you should really try running some games at 1080p on it, see what kind of settings you need to get 60 fps (spoiler, you won't get 60 fps on MW2 on an Intel iGPU unless you have a laptop). I think it gives a good glimpse into why I think things are going toward SoCs.
An official slide for Meteor Lake advertised 192 EUs (12 Xe cores) over 2 years ago. That was pulled back to 128 EUs (8 Xe cores), but it's still around Phoenix performance. Old rumors claimed 320 EUs (20 Xe cores) for Arrow Lake (mobile).