Thursday, May 19th 2022

Russia to Use Chinese Zhaoxin x86 Processors Amidst Restrictions to Replace Intel and AMD Designs

Many companies, including Intel and AMD, have stopped product shipments to Russia amidst the war in Ukraine in the past few months. This has left the Russian state without any new processors from the two prominent x86 designers, thus slowing down the country's technological progress. To overcome this issue, it seems like the solution is embedded in the Chinese Zhaoxin x86 CPUs. According to the latest report from Habr, a motherboard designer called Dannie is embedding Chinese Zhaoxin x86 CPUs into motherboards to provide the motherland with an x86-capable processor. More precisely, the company had designed a BX-Z60A micro-ATX motherboard that embeds Zhaoxin's KaiXian KX-6640MA SoC with eight cores based on LuJiaZui microarchitecture. The SoC is clocked at a frequency range of 2.1-2.7 GHz, carries 4 MB of L2 cache, 16 lanes of PCIe 3.0, and has integrated graphics, all in a 25 Watt TDP.

As far as the motherboard is concerned, it supports two DDR4 memory slots, two PCIe x16 connectors, M.2-2280 and M.2-2230 slots, and three SATA III connectors for storage. For I/O you have USB ports, DisplayPort, HDMI, VGA/D-Sub, GbE, 3.5-mm audio, and additional PS/2 ports. This is a pretty decent selection; however, we don't know the pricing structure. A motherboard with KaiXian KX-6640MA SoC like this is certainly not cheap, so we are left to wonder if this will help Russian users deal with the newly imposed restriction on importing US tech.
Sources: Habr, via Tom's Hardware
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33 Comments on Russia to Use Chinese Zhaoxin x86 Processors Amidst Restrictions to Replace Intel and AMD Designs

#26
Assimilator
RedBearBecause of something called secondary sanctions, i.e. sanctions that target those who help circumventing the main target of the sanctions. Russia doesn't apply secondary sanctions on gas and oil atm, so Germany can simply resell it. But the US is more than willing to target Chinese companies that engage in evading these sanctions, even if it will further cripple the global supply chain and raise inflation to the moon.
Thank god there's at least one other adult in this thread.
Posted on Reply
#27
AusWolf
I knew all along that restrictions were a bad idea.
Posted on Reply
#28
KuronekoRuri
Tom's Hardware Update 05/19 5:05 pm PT: A representative from Zhaoxin has confirmed to Tom's Hardware that the company only focuses on business in China. Zhaoxin has no intention thus far to sell its products to other countries. Zhaoxin has also sent out announcements to its partners to emphasize the company's policy and to ensure that they understand Zhaoxin's policy.

-------------------
As a Chinese, I have not received any news about Zhaoxin is selling to Russia. I think Tom's update is correct.
This SoC is so expensive, I bought the roughly same mATX board and cost me about 700USD for a FX8300 level performance chip. I dont think Russia can afford this. They can just bought AMD/Intel chips though us, that is much cheaper.
Posted on Reply
#29
95Viper
Stay on topic.
And, the topic is "Russia to Use Chinese Zhaoxin x86 Processors Amidst Restrictions to Replace Intel and AMD Designs".
Stop the insults and hate.
Posted on Reply
#30
R-T-B
rusTORKBecause news itself is completely wrong. =) This board and CPU combination made for government sector. To kick Intel\AMD\IBM in window from tenders and government contracts. There is no problem to buy Intel\AMD CPU for civilians in country.

Intel left country, but CPUs are in stock;
AMD left country, but CPUs are in stock;
NVIDIA left country, but GPUs are in stock (not FE, but AIB)

Get it?
Stock does not matter much if pricing is absurd...

My bet is it is, and thus this newspiece becomes a possibility if not reality.
Posted on Reply
#31
MarsM4N
Full steam backwards for da Comrades it is. :D When their current rigs are outdated, it will only be low demanding indie games. When their western cars are broken down & with the lack of replacement parts, there will be in 10 years only Lada's on the streets (and maybe some Chinese cars). When Steam finally pulls the plug (or the Kremlin cuts the iNet to the west), there will only be a "Tencent Gaming Network". And if Microsoft pulls out of Russia, they will game on Red Star OS, lol:


But the thing is, China is advancing fast in every aspect. How long will it take for them to catch up to western chips? And do "restrictions" actually work? I mean, chips aren't that big, making border smuggling kinda easy.
Posted on Reply
#32
AusWolf
MarsM4NAnd do "restrictions" actually work?
I don't think they do. They're just encouraging China to advance their technologies faster than ever. The world will be polarised again soon at this rate.
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