As AMD is rolling out the Ryzen 7000 ‘Raphael’ processors with as much as 16 cores based mostly on the Zen 4 microarchitecture, the corporate itself is already testing its next-generation Ryzen Threadripper 7000-series ‘Storm Peak’ CPUs with elevated core depend and different perks that high-end desktops and workstations have a tendency to supply.
AMD (and a few of its shut companions) have a tendency to check the corporate’s EPYC and Ryzen Threadripper processors on distributed computing workloads since they reap the benefits of excessive core counts. Nevertheless, this time, somebody examined an engineering pattern of AMD’s yet-to-be-announced CPU with 64 cores with simultaneous multithreading help in Einsten@Residence (opens in new tab), as uncovered by Benchleaks (opens in new tab).