AMD's first Zen 4 processor has 128 cores |
AMD has released its first processor based on Zen 4 architecture and promises to deliver powerful functionality. This disclosure includes a new roadmap for the fourth generation of EYPC processors.
According to the report, the company has unveiled its first Zen 4 roadmap during AMD's accelerated data center operations. The first two series of processors are Epyc chips for servers and other heavy computing tasks.
That was after the company revealed its EPYC Milan-X chip. Equipped with a maximum of 768MB of L3 cache and an Instinct MI250X GPU.
The company also announced the first details of the TSMC 5nm manufacturing process for its new Genoa and Bergamo chips.
Compared to the 7nm process that AMD uses for its current chips, it offers twice the density and power efficiency, as well as 1.25 times the performance.
The first series is called Genoa and was designed for public computers. It has up to 96 Zen 4 cores and supports DDR5 memory, PCIe 5.0 hardware, CXL 1.1, RAS, and AMD security suite.
This family will arrive in 2022. Partners are now sampling the chips.
Although the second series is called Bergamo and is designed for cloud computing, AMD promises to offer up to 128 modified Zen 4c cores with similar functionality.
Bergamo supports DDR5 memory, PCIe 5.0, CXL 1.1, RAS hardware, and the AMD security suite. The modified Zen-4c architecture optimizes cache and power consumption to increase the number of cores and save as many threads as possible.
The Bergamo family will not appear until the first half of 2023.
AMD wants to be a competitive force in the data center
The company hopes to become the competitive edge of the data center. His goal has always been to satisfy customers' needs by offering competitive products that customers can trust. How to increase market share and revenue. Since introducing the third generation of EPYC, AMD has grown the company's revenue.