Intel officially launched the third-generation Ice Lake-SP Xeon server CPU on April 7, using the 10nm process for the first time, with a maximum of 40 cores.
According to the latest news, a tipster announced some of the parameters of Intel’s fourth-generation Xeon processor, this generation of CPU code-named Sapphire Rapids.
According to the news, the fourth-generation Xeon will still use the 10nm SuperFin process, with a maximum of 56 cores, and the TDP will increase from 270W to a maximum of 350W. In addition, the processor also supports 8-channel DDR5 memory with a frequency of up to 4800MHz, which brings better performance.
In other respects, the fourth-generation Xeon is expected to have up to 80 PCIe 5.0 channels, and in addition to AVX-512, it also supports the AMX/TMUL instruction set.
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Intel’s fourth-generation Xeon will also have 24-core and 44-core models, with TDPs of 225W and 270W, respectively. The current third-generation Ice Lake-SP Xeon processor has a 20% increase in IPC compared to the previous generation, the number of memory channels has been upgraded to 8 channels, and the AI computing power has also been improved. Intel said that the new generation of processors has shipped 200,000 units.
(Via)