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Intel Launches Xeon E5 v4 Family of Processors Based On Broadwell-EP (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: Intel is officially launching a brand new series of Xeon processors today, the Xeon Processor E5 v4. The Xeon Processor E5 v4 family is based on Broadwell, specifically Broadwell-EP, though they are socket compatible with the previous generation v3 series. The new Xeon E5 v4 family, however, features a number of updates and enhancements. The Broadwell-EP based Xeon E5 v4, for example, is built using Intel's more advanced 14nm process node, and the largest chips can feature up to 22 processor cores (44 threads). The E5 v4 series still supports up to quad-channel DDR4 memory, but the maximum supported speed now tops out at 2400 MT/s, up from 2133 MT/s. Also, because of its additional cores, the E5-2600 v4 series now features up to 55MB of last-level cache. Support for 3D die-stacked LRDIMMs has been added too, along with DDR4 write CRC, and of course the higher speeds. Performance with a 2P dual-socket Xeon E5-2697 v4 system, with 36 total cores and 72 threads, rips through Cinebench in testing, unlike any desktop chip could. It's impressive to see in action.

9 of 42 comments (clear)

  1. More Benchmarks by zenlessyank · · Score: 4, Informative
  2. more cores = more licenses by known_coward_69 · · Score: 2

    with everyone going to per core licensing this is just going to be another money pit. we run SQL on 12 cores and don't really need them all. we get more bang from more cache on the CPU than more cores

    1. Re:more cores = more licenses by fnj · · Score: 5, Insightful

      with everyone going to per core licensing this is just going to be another money pit

      In what dreary, greedy, thieving, get-rich-quick capitalistic world is "everyone" going to per core licensing? Debian does not cost per core. Apache does not cost per core. PostgreSQL does not cost per core. In fact none of them cost you anything at all.

  3. Will Apple finally ship a new Mac Pro? by steveha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Mac Pro is now ridiculously stale. ("Days since last release: 833")

    I've read articles speculating that Apple might be re-designing the Mac Pro again as many of its intended users are disappointed that it has no internal expansion at all. So Apple could be sitting on a design refresh, waiting for these new chips.

    I even read speculation that Apple would cancel the Mac Pro product line, but IMHO that is very unlikely. Apple sells a lot more notebooks than Mac Pros, but I just can't see Apple walking away from a very high-margin product.

    So now that there are refreshed Xeons, maybe we will see a refreshed Mac Pro.

    P.S. I was surprised that Apple didn't release a standard enclosure for lots of hard drives or whatever. You should have your Mac Pro and then one box with one cord, rather than a half-dozen boxes and a half-dozen cords. But I guess Apple left that for third parties such as Sonnet. I watched the video for that Sonnet product I linked... it said that Sonnet followed Apple's guidelines for how to best mount a Mac Pro. Therefore, Apple has guidelines for third party vendors for Mac Pro mounting products.

    Even so, it's amazing how complicated the Sonnet enclosure has to be to solve the problem. Thunderbolt connectors can pop out, so they invented a retaining device that uses a bolt to keep the plug in. You need to run multiple Thunderbolt cables inside the box. And they said they were not able to offer a passthrough for Thunderbolt because Thunderbolt won't work with one (they didn't elaborate, something about needing active circuits on both ends of the connection, but I don't know why that rules out a passthrough).

    And oh boy is that an expensive way to go: buy an expensive Mac Pro, then spend another $1500 on the enclosure.

    --
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    1. Re:Will Apple finally ship a new Mac Pro? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Mac Pro is now ridiculously stale. ("Days since last release: 833")

      Apple has been letting all of their computer products go stale (they're almost all red and 'Don't Buy' on the buyer's guide http://buyersguide.macrumors.c...). I've been waiting for a substantial macbook pro or even air upgrade for awhile now and even at the March announcements when I hoped for Skylake CPU upgrade announcements...nothing.

      It seems to me that Apple's priorities are phones and tablets and that anything that isn't a phone or a tablet just doesn't have their focus at the moment. Maybe because we can get by on the very stale but still very usable hardware that we bought years ago without actually NEEDING a hardware refresh, or maybe phones and tablets just generate relatively more profit for them. I don't know.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    2. Re:Will Apple finally ship a new Mac Pro? by tlhIngan · · Score: 2

      Apple has been letting all of their computer products go stale (they're almost all red and 'Don't Buy' on the buyer's guide http://buyersguide.macrumors.c... I've been waiting for a substantial macbook pro or even air upgrade for awhile now and even at the March announcements when I hoped for Skylake CPU upgrade announcements...nothing.

      It seems to me that Apple's priorities are phones and tablets and that anything that isn't a phone or a tablet just doesn't have their focus at the moment. Maybe because we can get by on the very stale but still very usable hardware that we bought years ago without actually NEEDING a hardware refresh, or maybe phones and tablets just generate relatively more profit for them. I don't know.

      Both, actually. Apple concentrates on the profit centers for obvious reasons - and lets stuff that doesn't make as much money go a bit staler. It's why iPhones get updated regularly, iPads less so (less tablets shipping, less profit, which is why the iPad Air 3 ("iPad Pro 9.7", but really, it's a 3rd gen Air) was only just now updated), iPods haven't been updated since forever. Macs at least get some updates, but you are correct in that they also aren't heavy movers, and really are "good enough" right now and I'm sure the general population also feels the same.

      There is a direct correlation between update frequency and revenues...

  4. RedHat / CentOS 6. No systemd, updates until 2024 by raymorris · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A long term stable distribution might fit your needs better than a bleeding-edge distro like Fedora. For example Red Hat 6 (aka CentOS) doesn't have systemd and it will get security updates for eight more years. It will get updates for new hardware and other general updates through 2020, four more years.

  5. Re:Can Intel help fix the problematic software now by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 2

    >I'd like to use an Intel Linux distro that was really stable and could let me use Intel hardware to its full potential.

    I think they thought of that: https://clearlinux.org/

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  6. RH 6 extended life BEGINS Nov 30, 2020 by raymorris · · Score: 2

    With the change to longer life cycles, the production phase ends on November 30, 2020 and the four-year extended support period goes to 2024.
    https://access.redhat.com/supp...

    You are correct that new hardware support will not be added as long as I indicated. However, GP specifically said security updates, and there are 8 more years of important security updates, including four years left in the ten-year "production" phase.