Last month Intel introduced their Xeon 6 "Granite Rapids" processors with up to 128 P cores, MRDIMM support, and other improvements as a big

AMD EPYC 9755 / 9575F / 9965 Benchmarks Show Dominating Performance

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2024-10-10 20:00:03

Last month Intel introduced their Xeon 6 "Granite Rapids" processors with up to 128 P cores, MRDIMM support, and other improvements as a big step-up in performance and power efficiency for their server processors. The Xeon 6900P series showed they could tango with the AMD EPYC 9004 Genoa/Bergamo processors in a number of areas, but Genoa has been around since November 2022... With today's AMD 5th Gen EPYC "Turin" launch, Zen 5 is coming to servers and delivers stunning performance and power efficiency. The new top-end AMD EPYC Turin processor performance can obliterate the competition in most workloads and delivers a great generational leap in performance and power efficiency. Here are our first 5th Gen AMD EPYC Turin benchmarks in looking at the EPYC 9575F, EPYC 9755, and EPYC 9965 processors across many workloads and testing in both single and dual socket configurations.

Since beginning with Zen 5 testing earlier this year with the Ryzen AI 300 series and Ryzen 9000 desktop processors, I have been super eager for 5th Gen AMD EPYC processors. As shown across numerous articles the past few months, Zen 5 delivers great generational uplift and evolved power efficiency. The Ryzen 9000 series desktop processors have been tackling HPC and technical workloads very well and great gains over the Ryzen 7000 series. The Zen 5 gains here with HPC / technical computing have been much more significant than Ryzen 9000 series gains for gamers. All my hopes for EPYC Turin have panned out true over the past few weeks of testing these Zen 5 server processors.

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