We will just have to wait and see, a lot of the patients and or white papers i have read in the last year appear to be in Zen.
What are you talking about, Zen is a primarily Server targeted CPU, the Server Market in x86 CPU a year is in the 15-20 billion USD. HPC is nowhere near as important as people who get distracted by bright shiny things think. Desktop is dying ( sad panda). AMD have a serious opportunity to take a large amount of the notebook space with the APU. Highend Desktop is the area amd is least likely to be able to compete as 14LLP is unlikely to scale clocks upto and beyond 4ghz.
Max you can buy is 24 core. You can also only get 22 cores on E5 which is what most orgs buy as 2 to 1 P is what the vast majority of servers run.
Now explain 8 core Zen going clock for clock with 8 core broadwell while consuming less power when making your comparison.
We know more then enough about Zen's uarch to know stupid comparisons of 8 cores vs 4 cores are just that... stupid. The question is where does integer IPC fall, SB,HW,SL. Zen has more resources in almost every way vs SB, so Haswell seems possible. You then have quotes like this from people ( works for one of the big OEM's) who have been highly critical of AMD:
http://semiaccurate.com/forums/showpost.php?p=257718&postcount=2120
or even from this forum:
So if we take that at face value(outside of 256bit vectors) a 3.5ghz 8 Zen vs 8 core broadwell-E 3.2ghz base puts Zen around ~10% behind broadwell-E per clock.
The Second quote is in relation to the 32core part so, Zen will have 32 cores, with more memory channels then E7/E5(thus capacity) with on SOC multiple 10gbe and we have wait and see but rumored on SOC crypto engines ( like Seattle).
Now look at what chip all the "big" guys /webb 2.0's want, thats right Xeon D, Which if you look at Zen (from what we know already) is more then a match and offering upto twice the core count and if the crypto accelerator exists a significant advantage .
I have a question for you what do you really know about the server market? I design Datacentre infrastructure for a living im very well aware of what matters to both Enterprise and Cloud providers ( i work in both spaces). I have no idea what Zen's performance looks like but your average cloud and enterprise Server is running a hypervisor and is crammed full of 2-8 thread VM's, You almost always run out of memory bandwidth and capacity long before CPU.
A 24core Zen with 8 memory channels with perf and perf per watt in the ball park ( we know the 32core is rated upto 180watt TDP) is going to sell well because that extra two memory channel can cut down your server farm size by 25%. Depending on pricing i dont think a 32 core part will be as attractive in that market as your not getting extra memory capacity/bandwidth per core.
You would be surprised, cost of rack space, cost of fibre channel switches, cost of top of rack, end of row switches, even removing the need for add in/on mother board 10gbe NIC's all adds up, Plenty of app stacks are built on Open source which massively increases the proportion of cost hardware makes up. People like google, Azure etc who dont have to care about licencing hardware makes up a very large amount of the cost. In Enterprise with the way Microsoft Datacentre licencing works ( per socket, SQL etc are sperate) again reducing footprint (form more memory capacity) can make a massive difference.
As i said in the other thread based off what we know my biggest concern is what neilz said about 2P scaling.
So what exactly were you talking about again?
/end thread derailment