AMD Launching 8 Core Zen CPUs Next Year, With Multithreading And IPC On Par With Haswell

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AMD Announces Zen, 40% IPC Improvement Over Excavator – Coming In 2016

AMD has finally broke its silence on its upcoming high performance x86 CPU core “Zen” at the company’s Financial Analyst Day. The highly anticipated high performance x86 CPU core is shaping up to be a true contender that will bring competition back to the CPU market.

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We exclusively reported two months ago that AMD will be unveiling its new CPU and GPU cores at this event today and that’s exactly what they did. We also first broke the news about AMD’s next generation high performance core back in September of last year. At which point AMD’s then CEO Rory Read revealed the code name for the company’s upcoming high performance x86 CPU architecture. Prior to then we only had knowledge of its sister ARMv8 core code named K12.

AMD’s Zen CPU Core Coming in 2016 – Features FinFET, SMT and New Cache System

Today however we got a lot more than just a code name. AMD revealed the major features of Zen, a rough estimate of how it performs and when it will be available.

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Zen will be AMD’s successor to the Bulldoze family of cores. It will be the first ever CPU core from the company to adopt SMT , Simultaneous Multithreading. It will also the first entirely new CPU core after the company’s previous CMT, Clustered Multithreading design featured in the Bulldozer family.

In addition to SMT, Zen also features a new high-bandwidth low latency cache system.
A vital improvement over the previous generation of cores. Since subpar cache performance was one of the primary pitfalls of AMD’s Bulldozer CPU microarchitecture. AMD announced that Zen will be available starting next year. The new CPU core will be fabricated on FinFET, however the company doesn’t specify whether it will be 14nm or 16nm FinFET however. But we think it’s a pretty safe bet that it will be Globalfoundries 14nm. Now let’s talk about performance…

Zen Features 40% More Instructions Per Clock Compared To Excavator

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Mark Papermaster, AMD’s Chief Technology Officer. Revealed that Zen will have a huge improvement in IPC, Instructions Per Clock, vs Excavator. AMD’s latest and last, yet unreleased, Bulldozer family CPU core. A 40% increase in IPC would represent the largest jump in IPC ever for the company. We’re not particularly surprised but still very excited about this huge improvement.

Mark Papermaster also made it a point to highlight that this 40% performance improvement figure is independent of the manufacturing process. So it’s a permanent architectural performance improvement that will always be present regardless of the process node flavor chosen to make a Zen based product.

To put this massive leap in performance into perspective a 40% IPC improvement would put Zen on par with Haswell according to the aggregate single threaded PassMark database. That’s based on Steamroller CPU performance, so without even accounting for the IPC improvement with Excavator. Couple that IPC improvement with SMT support and affordable Summit Ridge 8 core CPUs that are on par with Intel’s $1000 i7 5960X Extreme CPU and you’ve got an extremely competitive product.

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Zen will be featured in AMD’s entire product line-up in 2016 from FX CPUs to APUs in both desktop and mobile. Succeeding Zen will be Zen+ cores. Which will feature evolutionary improvement over Zen. The company will introduce a new socket in 2016 dubbed AM4 that will house products spanning from high performance CPUs to mainstream APUs based on Zen and next generation FinFET GCN based GPUs.

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The new family of high performance FX CPUs which appeared in previous leaks as “Summit Ridge” will feature SMT CPUs with high core counts and DDR4 memory support. The platform will be based on the new AM4 socket and a new yet undisclosed chipset. Unconfirmed leaks indicate that Summit Ridge will feature CPUs with up to 8 Zen cores and 12MB of L2 and L3 cache. But that is yet to be confirmed as they may actually have more CPU cores than what is rumored.

Source: wccftech
 
Uhm, I will believe AMD only after actual benchmark results come out. But it is a good news nevertheless, and will atleast force Intel to rethink about their monopolistic(can't blame them for it though) view on market. It will be hard for AMD to reach Athlon 64 level of performance again(they practically gave up on CPU after thinking of heterogeneous APUs.....a plan assured to backfire), also given lack of dedicated foundry(kudos to spinning off foundry business) and therefore lack of direct experience in manufacturing process optimization(remember tricore phenom with working fourth core?), it might be hard for them to switch to FinFET.

More competition will only benefit consumers in the end.
 
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