Menu

Post image 1
Post image 2
Post image 3
Post image 4
Post image 5
Post image 6
Post image 7
Post image 8
Post image 9
Post image 10
Post image 11
Post image 12
Post image 13
Post image 14
Post image 15
Post image 16
Post image 17
Post image 18
Post image 19
Post image 20
Post image 21
Post image 22
Post image 23
Post image 24
Post image 25
Post image 26
Post image 27
Post image 28
Post image 29
Post image 30
Post image 31
Post image 32
Post image 33
Post image 34
Post image 35
Post image 36
Post image 37
Post image 38
Post image 39
Post image 40
Post image 41
Post image 42
Post image 43
Post image 44
Post image 45
Post image 46
Post image 47
Post image 48
Post image 49
Post image 50
Post image 51
Post image 52
Post image 53
Post image 54
Post image 55
Post image 56
Post image 57
Post image 58
Post image 59
Post image 60
Post image 61
Post image 62
1 / 62
0

Intel Xeon 6+ ‘Clearwater Forest’ puts 18A in the data center with up to 288 cores, 576 MB of L3 cache — new Xeon 6990E+ is 30% faster per thread than 192-core AMD Epyc 9965, says Intel

Latest from Tom's Hardware ·Jake Roach·about 14 hours ago
#lpVKutLh
Reading 0:00
15s threshold

(Image credit: Intel) Intel is returning to the data center with Xeon 6+, now harnessing the power of Intel 18A. After revealing Xeon 600 chips for workstations earlier in the year, Intel is turning back to the data center with Xeon 6+, an E-core-only design previously known as Clearwater Forest. The flagship Xeon 6990E+ is designed for compute density, packing in 288 Darkmont cores with 576 MB of L3 cache, with support for dual-socket systems, taking the core count up to 576. Intel claims the 6990E+ delivers an average 30% performance per thread improvement compared to AMD’s 192-core Epyc 9965, as well as up to 30% better power efficiency. We’ve heard a lot about Clearwater Forest leading up to this launch, including a full architectural deep dive from Intel last year . As a refresher, Xeon 6+ is the culmination of Intel’s disaggregated approach to processor design over the past several generations, using a mixture of nodes and packaging techniques to achieve such high core density.…

Continue reading — create a free account

Join HashtagPLUS to read full articles, follow hashtags, vote, and join the conversation.

Read More