• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD Reveals EPYC Datacenter Processor Pricing

Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
22,229 (3.44/day)
Location
Olympia, WA
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen 9 9950X
Motherboard MSI MAG X670E Tomahawk Wifi
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon, Phanteks and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 128GB (4x 32GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-4200(Running 1:1:1 w/FCLK)
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 5800X Optane 800GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs, 1x 2TB Seagate Exos 3.5"
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64, other office machines run Windows 11 Enterprise
AMD has unveiled the pricing scheme for its latest EPYC line of datacenter processors. In a series of graphs and tables at it's EPYC launch presentation, it outlined a comprehensive platform that it claims beats Intel on a performance per dollar basis across the entire 64 thread spectrum. What is known up to now in regards to pricing can be summarized in this nice table we have made for you below:




Intel for its part has responded in kind, vowing that its Xeon chips will continue to "best all competitors." They reference their Xeon Scalable line as a potential answer to AMD's EPYC lineup, and remind their audience that while they have provided "20+ years of uninterrupted data center innovations," their competitor AMD can hardly claim the same.

Still, if AMD's numbers are anything to go by, Xeon Scalable has a significant uphill battle in store for it from the price/performance metric.

The high points of AMD's presentation on EPYC's price-to-performance competitiveness can be viewed below:



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Are any of these CPU's compatible on the threadripper platform? or is this for a totally different socket again?
 
Are any of these CPU's compatible on the threadripper platform? or is this for a totally different socket again?

New socket. It is not a bad thing, servers and desktops are different.
 
Are any of these CPU's compatible on the threadripper platform? or is this for a totally different socket again?

Different. MB needs wired for 8 ch ram and all those pci-e lanes.

Enterprise is never the same.
 
New socket. It is not a bad thing, servers and desktops are different.

Well considering Threadripper is basically Server just transformed into desktop lol but fair enough
 
Well considering Threadripper is basically Server just transformed into desktop lol but fair enough
well, no. Threadripper is 2x summit ridge, EPYC is 4x summit ridge and Ryzen is 1x summit ridge.
 
well, no. Threadripper is 2x summit ridge, EPYC is 4x summit ridge and Ryzen is 1x summit ridge.

Well if you think servers havent had up to 16cores in the past few yrs then I dont know where you have been lol Opteron 32 Core anyone?
 
Thats very competitive pricing in the server world. Now hopefully the AMD server boards are worth a damn.
 
Well if you think servers havent had up to 16cores in the past few yrs then I dont know where you have been lol Opteron 32 Core anyone?
32 cores, which one of the summit ridge based AMD offerings has that? i know, the server one named EPYC. Threadripper is the HEDT/workstation iteration.

Of course nobody is going to stop you running a server OS on them (my personal server runs on a A8-5600K), but that is not the intended purpose of the chip and that will be reflected in the motherboards.
 
32 cores, which one of the summit ridge based AMD offerings has that? i know, the server one named EPYC. Threadripper is the HEDT/workstation iteration.

Of course nobody is going to stop you running a server OS on them (my personal server runs on a A8-5600K), but that is not the intended purpose of the chip and that will be reflected in the motherboards.

What? :wtf: I think your getting confused here, read back to the first thread you commented on and think about it lol :slap:

Im talking about pure core count, not what its named etc
 
What? :wtf: I think your getting confused here, read back to the first thread you commented on and think about it lol :slap:

Im talking about pure core count, not what its named etc
And that is where you are wrong, since you are calming that a 16 core thread ripper is a server chip, when the actual fact is that both Treadripper and EPYC use the consumer cores in a x2 or x4 configuration.
core count is not the only thing that makes a computer a server, ECC and management features is also important, while fancy RGB and overclocking is completely irrelevant.

Treadripper CPU is a dual socket consumer solution in one socket, EPYC is a quad consumer socket with some extra crypto and management features in one socket.

so the statement
Well considering Threadripper is basically Server just transformed into desktop lol but fair enough
is wrong.
 
And that is where you are wrong, since you are calming that a 16 core thread ripper is a server chip, when the actual fact is that both Treadripper and EPYC use the consumer cores in a x2 or x4 configuration.
core count is not the only thing that makes a computer a server, ECC and management features is also important, while fancy RGB and overclocking is completely irrelevant.

Treadripper CPU is a dual socket consumer solution in one socket, EPYC is a quad consumer socket with some extra crypto and management features in one socket.

so the statement

is wrong.

So who is wrong now? maybe you want to redo your statement on this since all the information is out now and I dont think I have to say anything to prove how right I was and how wrong you where :roll:
 
Back
Top