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It looks like 7NM Epyc will be made at GF:
https://www.anandtech.com/show/13122/amd-rome-epyc-cpus-to-be-fabbed-by-tsmc
The article and URL say the exact opposite
It seems AMD are using both GloFlo and TSMC for 7nm.
Single core IPC is the same as Coffeelake (8700K) its clock speed that AMD need now.Pretty confident we are going to see a 6 core ccx then an 8 core ccx on Ryzen 7nm.
So first we will see 12core 24 thread on the Ryzen 3700 then 16 core on the 4700.
That is frankly incredible, but it is single core IPC that will make or break it.
It doesn't matter how they get there, speed or IPC... But yeah seeing them get the clocks higher would be awesome. Single thread performance is still intels, and with their next chips hitting 5ghz boost out of the box they look set to keep it until ar least Zen2.Single core IPC is the same as Coffeelake (8700K) its clock speed that AMD need now.
According to Expreview, AMD could launch 7nm Raven Ridge APUs at the end of this year.
https://videocardz.com/77660/expreview-amd-expected-to-launch-7nm-apu-at-the-end-of-this-year
Well it looks like they were likely referring to the Ryzen 7 2800H, a high-end mobile 12nm refresh.
According to Expreview, AMD could launch 7nm Raven Ridge APUs at the end of this year.
https://videocardz.com/77660/expreview-amd-expected-to-launch-7nm-apu-at-the-end-of-this-year
Well it looks like they were likely referring to the Ryzen 7 2800H, a high-end mobile 12nm refresh.
AMD CTO: 'We Went All In' On 7nm CPUs
AMD is betting big on its 7-nanometer processors, going so far as to move up the launch date of the technology, said CTO Mark Papermaster.
"We knew 7nm would be a big challenge, so we made the bet, we shifted our resources onto the new node," Papermaster said earlier this month in an exclusive interview with CRN. "We didn't just dip our toe in the water. We went all in."
Papermaster said the company originally planned to release the 7nm Vega graphics processor in 2019 but was able to move the product up the calendar as a result of "immense focus." AMD's first 7nm product is now slated to arrive later this year with the company's next-generation Radeon Vega Instinct GPU, which was demonstrated at this year's Computex and comes with 32 GB of memory.
The company's 7nm EPYC server CPU is expected to come out next year, and its 7nm Ryzen desktop processors will follow sometime after that.