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According to Computerbase.de, the new processors range from the Xeon Gold 5122, which starts out at 3.6GHz with between 14 and 22 cores, up to the Xeon Platinum 8180, which clocks in at 2.5GHz and ...
Sitting at the top of the totem pole is the Xeon Platinum 8180, which is clocked at 2.5GHz and packs in an incredible 28 cores and 56 threads (thanks to HyperThreading).
Intel's current line of Xeon Scalable Processors like the Xeon Platinum 8180, top out at 28 CPU cores. The new Cascade Lake AP chips, on the other hand, will pack up to 48 cores using an MCM.
In terms of specifications, the Xeon Platinum 8180 has 28 cores, 38.5MB of cache, 44 PCIe lanes direct to the CPU, and six-channel DDR4-2666 memory support, either ECC or standard.
Intel is reportedly launching the new Xeon Platinum 8180 which will rock 28C/56T of CPU performance at 2.5GHz, with 38.5MB of L3 cache and a 205W TDP.
Up until this point, Qualcomm has contended that the 48-core Centriq 2460 offers a 4x improvement in performance-per-dollars versus the Intel Xeon Platinum 8180.
The most powerful Xeon will be the Xeon Platinum 8180 at 2.5 GHz and 28 cores, the fastest will be the Xeon Platinum 8156 at 3.6 GHz. The Gold models wil get 22 cores for the 6152 at 2.1 GHz, the ...
To give you an idea of where that falls, the current HWBot record for a single 28-core Xeon 8180 Platinum is 5,010. We kicked out 5,859 without breaking a sweat.
Comparing this to Intel's Xeon Platinum 8180 in dual-CPU mode, which is capable of 1345 GFLOPs @ 3.4GHz and a huge 4855 MPix/s of media processing prowess, killing AMD in an epyc way.
Intel is changing the names it gives its new Xeon processors from the usual ‘E’ branding to a metallic theme. Moving forward, the entry-level versions will be known as Bronze, with the mid ...
In this guest article, our friends at Intel discuss how benchmarks show key workloads average 31% better on Intel Xeon Platinum 9282 than AMD EYPC “Rome” 7742. Intel analysis provides strong evidence ...