ICYMI, AMD afirma haberse puesto al día con el rendimiento de los juegos Core i9-12900K incluso antes de Zen 4
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Hay algunas ofertas tentadoras en la eShop de 3DS ahora mismo 7 5800X3D no es un 5800X con un overclock de CPU loco que tira la eficiencia por la ventana. De hecho, tiene relojes mas bajos! En lugar, aprovecha una nueva función adicional que AMD hizo a su existente “Zen 3” microarquitectura, llamado caché vertical 3D. esto es basicamente 64 MB de SRAM rápida apilados físicamente en la parte superior del núcleo de la CPU (CCD), dándolo 96 MB de caché de último nivel. La compañía ya lo ha estrenado con su EPYC “Milán-X” procesadores empresariales, y el Ryzen 7 5800X3D would be the first client-segment product with this CCD.
With 3D Vertical Cache tech in place, “Zen 3” enjoys a gaming performance boost akin to a generational update, with AMD claiming anywhere between 10 a 40 percent gaming performance gains over the Ryzen 9 5900X despite four fewer cores; which helps it sneak behind the Core i9-12900K “Alder Lake-S,” currently Intel’s flagship desktop processor.
AMD CEO Dr Lisa Su was specific about who the 5800X3D was for—those who use their PCs for one thing only, juegos. el chip tiene 8 Núcleos de CPU, with SMT enabling 16 procesadores lógicos. Each of these has 512 KB of L2 cache, y compartir 96 MB de caché L3. The processor ships with lower clock speeds than the 5800X, with a base frequency of 3.40 GHz (compared to 3.80 GHz of the 5800X); and boost frequency of 4.50 GHz (vs. 4.70 GHz of the 5800X). The processor’s TDP is the same as the 5800X, en 105 W. As we mentioned, this isn’t a case of the designers running the chip at eleventy GHz and several hundred Watts of TDP.
The 5800X3D, as a Socket AM4 part, is drop-in compatible with AMD 500-series and 400-series chipset motherboards, with a BIOS update. Since its TDP is unchanged at 105 W, it doesn’t come with any special VRM requirements (at least nothing different from what the 5800X needs).
Intel has already reacted to this development, by announcing the Core i9-12900KS, a variant of the i9-12900K with a massive 5.50 GHz boost frequency for the P-cores, which it hopes will ward off the 5800X3D. Intel is missing the point here. The 5800X is a $400-something part, priced rivaling the i7-12700K, and while the pricing of the 5800X3D is unknown, it’s highly likely to end up with an enormous gaming price-performance advantage over Intel. The 5800X3D releases this Spring.
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