Friday, October 20th 2023

Phytium Unveils 64-Core Feiteng Tengyun S2500 Processor for Data Centers Despite Sanctions

Phytium, a Chinese semiconductor company that faced U.S. government sanctions from 2021, has introduced its latest data center processor, the 64-core Feiteng Tengyun S2500. Designed for cloud and high-performance computing applications, this processor features a large-capacity shared L3 cache, enhanced security capabilities for cloud servers, and improved memory subsystem reliability. The Feiteng Tengyun S2500 features 64 FTC661 cores developed by Phytium, which are based on Armv8 ISA. Reportedly, the CPU features 64 MB of L3 cache and 512 KB of L2 per core, bringing the total to 96 MB of processor cache. Compared to the previous generation line, the S2500 brings an L3 cache and TDP of 150 Watts, up from 90 Watts of previous generation.

This is Phytium's first new CPU in several years, raising questions about its production capacity and access to foundries, given its sanctions-related restrictions. It is currently unknown which foundry will manufacture the Feiteng Tengyun S2500, and we expect to hear more about it as (if) units get shipped. So far only display units have made appearance. Nonetheless, the company has continued its hardware development efforts and garnered interest in collaborating with Huawei to unify hardware and software ecosystems, which has yet to come to fruition.
Sources: IJIWEI (Chinese), via Tom's Hardware
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8 Comments on Phytium Unveils 64-Core Feiteng Tengyun S2500 Processor for Data Centers Despite Sanctions

#1
P4-630
AleksandarKPhytium
The first Chinese PhyPentium.. :D
Posted on Reply
#2
mechtech
Should have called it Pintium...................that would have been awesome.
Posted on Reply
#3
Pooch
This is pathetic, truly pathetic. The naming and the idea that they think they will be able to compete with this...product. Why didn't they just name it Pentium, its not like they care about laws or anything that is regulatory. For real.
Posted on Reply
#5
lilunxm12
PoochThis is pathetic, truly pathetic. The naming and the idea that they think they will be able to compete with this...product. Why didn't they just name it Pentium, its not like they care about laws or anything that is regulatory. For real.
While looks like pentium knockoff, Phytium indeed is THE homophonic translation of the original Chinese name 飞腾 (fei teng). It's hpc product intended for Chinese domestic market, if they really went that far with naming, it should be something looks/sounds like xeon/epyc.
Posted on Reply
#6
friocasa
"Despite sanctions"... the same thing they said about the Huawei Mate 60 Pro, they claimed it was so good, and yet they don't even dare to send it for review to DXOMark, the camera performs much worse than the previous one

Chinese companies are like "Hey, look how good our products are, sanctions can't stop us! ... ... ... but, can you remove them? C'mon America, it's for your own good!"
Posted on Reply
#7
Bwaze


That actually is funny. :D
Posted on Reply
#8
zlobby
That train is long gone. The Party now has all the tools to manyfacutre everything itself with zero outside reliance.
Posted on Reply
Apr 29th, 2024 10:05 EDT change timezone

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