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Intel Announces Core Ultra 200S Arrow Lake CPUs

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  • #21
    Originally posted by muncrief View Post
    No performance improvement? That's crazy. Especially since the Intel 13th and 14th generation CPUs spontaneously destroy themselves.
    The reason is previous generations used symmetric multi-threading (SMT) or what Intel calls Hyper-Threading. This uses speculation execution which led to all these vulnerabilities such as Spectre, Meltdown, etc. The benefit of Hyper-Threading is you get better performance because you get two threads per core. This new generation doesn't use Hyper-Threading so it only has one thread per core so it loses some performance but it becomes more secure.

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    • #22
      Originally posted by uid313 View Post

      The reason is previous generations used symmetric multi-threading (SMT) or what Intel calls Hyper-Threading. This uses speculation execution which led to all these vulnerabilities such as Spectre, Meltdown, etc. The benefit of Hyper-Threading is you get better performance because you get two threads per core. This new generation doesn't use Hyper-Threading so it only has one thread per core so it loses some performance but it becomes more secure.
      If the reason was security, they should've been stripping the multi-threading from its server SKUs as well. The fact is they don't.

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      • #23
        Originally posted by pesekcuy View Post

        If the reason was security, they should've been stripping the multi-threading from its server SKUs as well. The fact is they don't.
        I think they've already started to. The Intel Xeon 6700E​ only uses E-cores, 144 cores, which I think are without multi-threading. I wouldn't be surprised if the coming Xeon processors will be without multi-threading.

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        • #24
          I highly doubt that Intel's market share in the consumer desktop market will grow with ARL and they were already at 8% at Mindfactory lately. No AVX 10.2/AVX-512 and no gaming performance improvements won't get them anywhere and the efficiency improvements alone won't get them much sales either. There is also no incentive to invest into LGA18XX as a platform, as the chances are high that there is no newer generation on that socket.
          Last edited by ms178; 10 October 2024, 06:51 PM.

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          • #25
            Originally posted by uid313 View Post
            The reason is previous generations used symmetric multi-threading (SMT) or what Intel calls Hyper-Threading. This uses speculation execution which led to all these vulnerabilities such as Spectre, Meltdown, etc.
            The CPU uses speculative execution even without HT/SMT. The vulnerabilities that came from SMT were due to the possibility of having 2 threads from different processes or VMs executing on the same physical core, at the same time. It turns out there weren't quite such iron-clad barriers between the threads' state as had been assumed. This has been mitigated both directly, and by features in hypervisors and even the Linux kernel (called "core scheduling" - I think most distros disable by default) that restrict foreign threads from sharing a core.

            As pesekcuy said, Intel didn't drop hyperthreading from its server CPUs, which tells us they're still confident in their ability to make it secure. The rationale Intel gave for dropping it from their client P-cores is that it saved power on lightly-threaded workloads and reduced the area of their P-cores. Since client CPUs have E-cores they can rely upon for scaling multi-threaded performance, they decided it was a net win to make the P-cores smaller and more efficient by dropping HT.




            Originally posted by uid313 View Post
            I think they've already started to. The Intel Xeon 6700E​ only uses E-cores, 144 cores, which I think are without multi-threading.
            Intel's E-cores never had HT/SMT. The only exception to this was a special Frankenstein version of Silvermont they made for the Xeon Phi, which had dual AVX-512 pipes bolted on and 4-way SMT.

            Originally posted by uid313 View Post
            ​I wouldn't be surprised if the coming Xeon processors will be without multi-threading.
            They've explicitly said otherwise.
            Last edited by coder; 11 October 2024, 05:56 AM.

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            • #26
              So everything is "Ultra" now?

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