Earlier this week, Intel showed off a product coming in the fourth quarter of this year: an enthusiast-oriented 28-core processor
Aside from the core count and release window, Intel
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Reasonable speculation is that this chip will be taken from the Skylake-SP family. Skylake-SP (for "scalable processor") is the variant of the Skylake core designed for processors with more than eight cores: instead of arranging the cores in a ring, they're organized into a grid, which generally provides better scaling as the number of cores goes up, albeit at the expense of a more complicated design. Skylake-SP is used for the Xeon-SP line, and its close sibling, Skylake-X, is used for the X-Series enthusiast platform. Current Skylake-X chips lack QPI interconnects, ECC memory, and six memory channels that Skylake-SP has (they only use four), but they add overclocking.
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There are three Skylake-SP dies, called LCC, HCC, and XCC (for low, high, and extreme core counts), with 10, 18, and 28 cores, respectively. Currently, there are Xeon-SP processors using all three variants. Skylake-X processors are presently only LCC and HCC. The new chip looks like it's going to be an XCC Skylake-X.
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There's a possibility, however, that it won't be Skylake-X at all, but rather Cascade Lake-X. Cascade Lake is an incremental revision to the Skylake-SP/X platform: it adds some extra AVX512 instructions, it should include hardware fixes for Spectre and Meltdown attacks, and it should support faster memory. It will be built on Intel's "14nm++" process, compared to the "14nm+" process used for Skylake-SP/X, which should offer reduced power consumption.
Either way, this kind of chip won't come cheap. The 28-core Xeons start at about $8,700. An X series version will likely cost less (because Intel can use ECC support to protect its Xeon margins) but will still slot in comfortably above the $2,000 mark for the top-end HCC Skylake-X. Who would buy such a thing? Some will likely go to the rich kids who just have to have the latest and greatest; others will be snapped up by high frequency traders running custom-built, overclocked, liquid-cooled machines for the very fastest single system performance they can get. Source: Arstecnica
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