WYP
News Guru
Higher IPC, increased clock speeds and a new process node.

Read more on the future of AMD's Ryzen architecture.

Read more on the future of AMD's Ryzen architecture.
Great to hear they're not stopping here. Even a 20% overall single thread performance improvement would be way more than Intel can offer, but the numbers from GlobalFoundries sound really impressive!
It's also great to know that as an early AM4 adopter, I likely won't be left out after 2 generations and will almost definitely have access to Zen 3 and maybe even further without a motherboard upgrade.
I just got my refund from Intel and was thinking of a 1700x I wonder if I should just keep using my laptop and wait for Zen2 instead
It's good to see the future of Zen still being hyped. It should help keep a few from investing in Coffee Lake if they know that Ryzen has bigger plans to come.
I am now remembering the leaked roadmaps that pointed towards a future EPYC CPU using Zen 2 with 48 cores. Makes me wonder if core counts will increase per die or if AMD will create Zen 2 dies with more cores in each die.
If the 48-cores rumour is true, AMD could use the same 4-die threadripper design and have 12-cores each or a new 6-die design with 8 cores each like Ryzen. Interesting prospect.
Will AMD push to have even more cores per die with Ryzen 2 or the same core count on a smaller die? Some food for thought for Ryzen 2. 12-core per die would allow 12-core CPUs on AM4!
It is far too early to know what AMD is actually doing, so this is all just me talking to the wall. Even so, a 4-die solution seems best given AMD's memory controller configuration, as a 6x 8-core die solution would leave two dies with no memory interconnects if AMD uses the same socket and 8-channel memory setup.
Again, I am just talking hypotheticals here. AMD has not released any real info on Zen 2 yet.
Is AM4 set up for 12 cores though? Will current motherboards be able to handle them? I think 8 cores is enough for AM4 personally. They just need to get the prices down, clocks up (and IPC), and stabilise the platform fully. An 8 core CPU that clocks to 4.4Ghz with a 65W TDP, IPC on par with Skylake/Kaby Lake, all for €300. That would be drool worthy.
It really depends on how AMD wants to design their future CPUs, it is anyone's guess what the company will do.
As for 12 cores on AM4, it is possible as 7nm should save the die space, then the question is power, which is partially fixed by 7nm but would likely need some power saving architectural changes to work.
I personally would prefer to have 8 faster cores than 12 slower cores, it would also make Threadripper have an even more limited use case. Again it depends on how AMD designs their next generation, as the same dies should be used for AM4, TR4 and SP3 (EPYC). (How many cores will be in each Zen 2 die and will they use the same dies for each product stack?)
The big questions for Zen 2 are exact architectural changes are planned and how good (and how well utilised) 7nm is.
Is AM4 set up for 12 cores though? Will current motherboards be able to handle them? I think 8 cores is enough for AM4 personally. They just need to get the prices down, clocks up (and IPC), and stabilise the platform fully. An 8 core CPU that clocks to 4.4Ghz with a 65W TDP, IPC on par with Skylake/Kaby Lake, all for €300. That would be drool worthy.
I've never really gotten what the difference is between clocks and IPC? I've also thought that they were the same thing? :huh:
IPC = instructions per clock. Or, how many instructions a CPU can perform at a certain clock speed. IPC is not clock speed, but it does increase with clock speed, if that makes any sense.