Intel Launches Core i9-9900KS 8-Core CPU At 5GHz Across All Cores (hothardware.com) 89
MojoKid writes: As the "S" in its name implies, the new Intel Core i9-9900KS that launched today is something akin to a Special Edition version of the company's existing Core i9-9900K 8-core CPU. The processors are built from the same slab of silicon -- an 8-core, Coffee Lake-refresh based die and packaged up for Intel's LGA1151 socket. What makes the Core i9-9900KS different from its predecessor are its base and turbo boost clocks, which are rated for 4GHz and 5GHz across all-cores, respectively, with enhanced binning of the chips to meet its performance criteria. The Core i9-9900KS is arguably the fastest processor available right now for single and lightly-threaded workloads, and offers the highest performance in gaming and graphics tests. In more heavily-threaded workloads that can leverage all of the additional processing resources available in a 12-core CPU like the Ryzen 9-3900X, however, the 8-core Intel Core i9-9900KS doesn't fare as well. It did catch AMD's 12-core Threadripper 2920X, which is based on the previous-gen Zen+ architecture, on a couple of occasions, however. Intel's new Core i9-9900KS desktop processor is available starting today at $513 MSRP.
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I work as a freelance programmer.
I have a gaming PC and a few PCs on which I run my code (mostly video processing for surveillance, number crunching for scientific applications, and custom data processing where performance really matter) And yes, I need three, because I often have to test load distribution, collect statistics for long runs during different times of the day, and I do not want to assess performance on a PC that's doing something else. (Also, I like to wipe boxes between customers, and VM d
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Windows 10.
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I'm using the Yahoo! searchbar and I need 16 cores at full load.
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I'm using the Yahoo! searchbar and I need 16 cores at full load.
... on Chrome. Better get at least a half TB of RAM too
Not to mention a decades-long crime streak. (Score:2)
Kids these days always fall for Microsoft's "But I've changed! Take me back!" because they can't see the behavioral patterns as they haven't experienced the history.
Right until MS does it yet again.
They will be the ones "ridiculed" in 20 years, when they know better, but their kids don't yet.
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Re: Too little, too late (Score:2)
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I do a lot of database work, so I do. Databases require some form of locking, which requires some form of IPC, which sucks on multi-core processors. One of the databases on which I'm currently working actually gets slower, when I add more cores.
That said, I probably wouldn't buy this CPU, since it still has the Spectre/Meltdown issue, but I'd still like to see better single-core performance from all CPU manufacturers.
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No, they don't, but that's what our application vendor uses, so we're stuck with it.
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Tell them to fix it. Last time I had a vendor do that in the database estate I had to look after, I requested that they fix it. They said it would be impractical.
I explained to the service that'd commissioned it that it was killing their productivity and slowing them down (which was the root of all the problems they experienced). Demoed one of the competitor apps running properly, and they canned the original and hit them for breach of contract on their supply tender due to selling software that was not o
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Mitigations involve slowdown, well into the double digit percentages for some workloads. So you're buying a 5 GHz processor, but only getting the equivalent of 4. What a bargain!
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That's a stupid statement.
If you benchmark a CPU with baked-in mitigations and its performance is great, there is nothing to complain about. Your statement would only hold water if you would benchmark the CPU against older variants and older variants would be 25% faster - which is not true.
Well, it isn't benchmarked with mitigations. (Score:2)
That's the point.
And those mitigations are only half-assed and don't really solve the problem anyway.
Re: Too little, too late (Score:1)
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This chip would probably be a great option for a serious MAME machine (given that MAME still values single thread perf above all else)
IG Flash (Score:1)
I wonder if the security issues will be fixed. (Score:2)
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Define fixed:
The microcode fixes are baked in the microcode that comes from the factory from da 1.
Nonetheless, it is a Coffee Lake refresh, which in turn is a Cannon Lake refresh, which in turn is a.... you get the idea...
Of course, since the mitigations are already baked in, the performance you measure is the performance you'll get.
But, being a coffee Lake refresh, the underlying architecture has not changed, which means, the vulnerability remain, which means that there may be more vulnerabilities lurking
Re:I wonder if the security issues will be fixed. (Score:5, Interesting)
Not anytime soon. Intel needs to completely redesign speculative execution for that. Any real fix at this time will come at a massive performance penalty and they are not going to accept that because then the lose the last (pseudo-) argument against AMD. AMD, on the other hand, has redesigned speculative execution and, in particular, branch-prediction that is probably not vulnerable in practice quite unlike this old Intel design.
Expect it to take at least 3 years before the have something fixed and then expect it to not have good performance, as basically all current Intel CPUs get their performance from excessive detail-optimization (otherwise their old manufacturing process could not compete at all). Detail optimization is a slow, manual process. It will probably take several additional years after they have a new design out until that design is competitive again.
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Intel is fucked, and they have known that they are fucked, and they have known what their big mistake was, and they can't undo it. They admitted it in April of 2016 with massive layoffs and the announcement of their new "cloud strategy" which is code for "we will remain competitive in the server space longer than in the desktop space."
Intels big mistake was obsessively trying to get 3D trigates to be practical at 10nm. They wasted half a decade on it, instead of half a decade solving
Re:I wonder if the security issues will be fixed. (Score:4, Funny)
Hey, how does it feel to have a Chinese company topping the semiconductor industry
It feels like the right China instead of the wrong one.
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You have nailed it.
Thanks.
"we will remain competitive in the server space longer than in the desktop space."
With the 64 core Epyc CPUs and the continues Spectre issues, even that looks highly doubtful now.
Intels big mistake was obsessively trying to get 3D trigates to be practical at 10nm. They wasted half a decade on it, instead of half a decade solving the yield problem, which is also a (lesser) problem at 14+++nm.
I think the problem here is that Intel never had really good CPUs, but they had superior manufacturing for a long time. Then they suddenly had not and tried to fix that by concentrating their efforts on something nobody else was doing, probably in a mistaken belief in their own superiority. In essence, Intel learned absolutely nothing from the first time AMD overtook them. They would probably have had to
Uuum, why not? (Score:2)
From a business perspective, Intel could definitely just have TSMC build their chips, and instantly crush AMD. Or, of TSMC want Intel to suffer, they could try e.g. Samsung, and offer them some profit advantage over their competitor TSMC.
Then, because Intel are and have always been sneaky sleazebags, they could of course build their own new fab tech from scratch without keeping around all the pricy baggage of an old process node.
Unless they did something like that already, and nobody wants to be Intels fab,
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From a business perspective, Intel could definitely just have TSMC build their chips, and instantly crush AMD.
Business, maybe, but tech, no way. First, they do not have the tooling to adapt to a manufacturing process different from their own. Second, the results would be nowhere as good as what they derive from their current manufacturing process. The only way they can compete at all is by careful, manual detail optimization of their outdated design on their outdated manufacturing process. They cannot do that when they have the design manufactured by somebody else. So, no, they would not "crush" AMD, they would act
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From a business perspective, Intel could definitely just have TSMC build their chips
Your statement would be correct if you said "from a technical standpoint" ... but on the business end of things, TSMC is PurePlay and absolutely would not ever in a million years make chips branded by a competing non-PurePlay foundry, certainly not the epitome of vertical integration that is Intel. Intel is literally as far as it is possible to get from being able to rent time on a PurePlay fab.
As far as Samsung, they would only do it if there was no conflict of interest, and Intel would only do it if yi
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So from a businesses perspective not either. They have truly painted themselves into a corner. The old combination of greed, arrogance and stupidity at work.
Re: I wonder if the security issues will be fixed. (Score:1)
Fanboi-only prpduct (Score:3)
Nobody sane is going to buy this. Too expensive, not really better than the competition and still has the Spectre issue unfixed.
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Too expensive
not really better than the competition
For all general purposes I agree there. But then this is hardly targeting a general purpose PC, throw a decent AMD in there.
and still has the Spectre issue unfixed.
And no one outside of a cloud services provider gives a crap.
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and still has the Spectre issue unfixed.
And no one outside of a cloud services provider gives a crap.
People are stupid about security, I agree. Especially as there are JavaScript based demo-exploits, so this is definitely not only a cloud thing. Just a matter of time until ordinary users will be hit.
More like already are hit. (Score:2)
You can bet your grandma, that Five Eyes, the FSB, China, the Mossad, NSO group and every similar enemy number one of humanity has and is actively using this already. Likely even before it got public. Remember: They have their own fabs, and in their league, you casually play around with dopant-level hardware backdoors!
This js child's play to them.
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Don't think so. Exploits are probably still in development or very careful, very restricted use. But they will become generally available if they turn out to work reasonably well. May still take a while though.
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People are stupid about security, I agree.
Yeah people are. They get overly excited about something that is impossible to execute in practice and fall back on a javascript demo which doesn't work outside a lab and produces no meaningful result without detailed information about the target machine.
Just a matter of time until ordinary users will be hit.
I'm waiting patiently. I mean with proof of concept code, and a completely unpatchable fault everyone should have their dickpics shared online right? Wrong! The attack is insanely complex to execute compared to every other attack possible out there and requ
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I am an actual security expert. You are just a cretin with a big ego and no clue.
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I am an actual security expert.
Oh that makes sense. I guess you need to drum up a completely false sense of fear in order to get some business. To security "experts" everything is a high risk, your business depends on it. I'll keep that in mind when I read your future posts, honestly I thought you were a professional troll but it all makes far more sense now.
But since I have no clue, educate me. Point out to me where the potentially most serious, prevalent, and still unpatched issue is being actively exploited. I'll wait. I mean every se
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Your mindset is reactive. Quite typical for the clueless.
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Gamers Nexus has a review. Gaming benchmarks start around 17 minutes in: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Yeah about that....if you game you can just get the Ryzen 3600 which is $300 cheaper which means you can get most of your system done for less than the cost of the Intel CPU alone.
I play quite a few games without an issue on my Intel i7 6800K (Broadwell) CPU (overclocked at 4.25 GHz)... and the Ryzen 3600 is 30% faster on average. So yes, a Ryzen 3600 would suffice in all cases except niche ones (such as "progamerers" playing CS:GO at 500 FPS).
The reason I can't upgrade my PC at the moment is the (un)availability of enough PCI Express lanes. My current CPU has 28 lanes, barely enough for the hardware I have thrown in my PC. All Ryzen and Intel CPUs except prosumer ones offer no more
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I'm confused, I thought Ryzens have 24 PCI-E lanes?
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The new Ryzen 3000 chips all offer 24 PCIe lanes. The Prosumer and Server chips offer even more.
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They offer 20 PCI Express lanes for devices (16X for graphics and 4X for nVME/SATA), because the rest of 4 lanes are the interconnect with the X570 chipset. Nevertheless, that's less than the 28 PCI Express lanes the 6800K offers.
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Is AMD trolling Intel with names? Intel release the X299 chipset and then AMD announces their X399 platform. Intel go for X390 and AMD releases Z490.
A used Threadripper and new mobo isn't too expensive these days.
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Like they were when AMD launched the 1st 1 ghz processor, or was it when AMD beat them with 64bit? History proves time and time again while AMD can make great products and be great competition to Intel, they can't hold the lead.
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It does a good bit better than the 3900X in gaming
Nope. It does a small, insignificant bit better in some benchmarks. In actual gaming, the difference is irrelevant.
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Nope. It does a small, insignificant bit better in some benchmarks. In actual gaming, the difference is irrelevant.
This is the truth. There are plenty of videos on youtube and articles that show comparisons between AMD and Intel. In similar class chips the difference is usually with in 2% to 5% in fps in favor of Intel. In gaming the difference is irrelevant but the price isn't.
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"Bin" ? (Score:2)
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Feel free to buy the design software and create your open-source CPU which violates nobody's patents. Then use your crate full of millions of dollars to make masks and a fab run, and hope that there will be no errors requiring more millions for new masks and fabrication (fat chance).
Whatever their flaws, the designers at AMD and Intel are not idiots. Bleeding edge general purpose CPU design is difficult and expensive.
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Rather have 4 of AMD's Cores. (Score:2)
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For those that doubt... ask yourself... what do you wait for? What processing is annoyingly slow?
It isnt single-threaded stuff. All of it is multi-threaded stuff. Encoding videos, compiling code, rendering,
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"His name was James Damore"
His big old nose you'll see no more,
He blamed his bullshit on autism,
More likely it was backed up jism,
Good fucking riddance James Damore
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Doubles as a space heater (Score:1)
Sounds like just the chip for the long cold winter months, or if you need to fry an egg. That 14nm+++++ tech you know.
Intel launches AMD FX-9590, but way too late (Score:3)
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Intel has never dominated the sub-$100 market before! This is groundbreaking!
I wonder how many warehouses are full of those for the price to drop so much. Selling them at a loss for sure.
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but that 8-core 5 GHz nerd wank crown
...is owned by Intel since IPC is actually a thing and ultimately peak GHz only matters within a specific architecture.
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LOL modded troll for correcting an absurd fanboi statement. Yep they give modpoints to just about anyone these days.
When it comes to the 9900KS.. (Score:1)
Argue all you want (Score:2)
The Core i9-9900KS is arguably the fastest processor available right now for single and lightly-threaded workloads
Argue all you want you are still wrong. 9900KS offers exactly no single thread performance gain over 9900K, your busiest thread runs on the fastest core which for both is exactly the same thing running at exactly the same 5GHz. The only difference for KS is that all the other cores are also the same 5GHz instead of being limited. That improves multi thread performance a bit, but not enough to catch up to AMD CPU-s that have an advantage of a node jump. And Zen 2 still beats it all in single thread performan