"It is set to launch in the future with two primary variants, including a Performance (P) core family based on Intel's Sierra Forest architecture and an Efficiency (E) core-flavored variant based on Granite Rapids."
Did Intel say anything about number of cores on Granite Rapids. Keeping it quite this late is bad news for sure. With Google launching ARM CPU, x86 is at crossroads for sure. Reply
am I correct in thinking that they are splitting Xeon Scalable into 4 swim lanes? 1. Sierra Forest-SP (all E-cores, LGA4710) 2. Granite Rapids-SP (all P-cores, LGA4710) 3. Sierra Forest-AP (all E-cores, LGA7529) 4. Granite Rapids-AP (all P-cores, LGA7529)Reply
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bubblyboo - Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - link
"It is set to launch in the future with two primary variants, including a Performance (P) core family based on Intel's Sierra Forest architecture and an Efficiency (E) core-flavored variant based on Granite Rapids."You swapped these Reply
NextGen_Gamer - Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - link
Yup Replytrivik12 - Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - link
Did Intel say anything about number of cores on Granite Rapids. Keeping it quite this late is bad news for sure. With Google launching ARM CPU, x86 is at crossroads for sure. Replym53 - Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - link
ARM is mainly a Sierra Forest competitor. Sierra Forest is launching soon. Replyedzieba - Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - link
Hearkens back to the old Xeon 1234 vX generational nomenclature. ReplyRU482 - Friday, April 12, 2024 - link
am I correct in thinking that they are splitting Xeon Scalable into 4 swim lanes?1. Sierra Forest-SP (all E-cores, LGA4710)
2. Granite Rapids-SP (all P-cores, LGA4710)
3. Sierra Forest-AP (all E-cores, LGA7529)
4. Granite Rapids-AP (all P-cores, LGA7529) Reply