
On 07/04/2016 11:51 AM, Lennart Sorensen via talk wrote:
They are both 14nm. Xeon turbos to 3.8GHz and no GPU at 80W, but i7 turbos to 4GHz with GPU at 65W. Me thinks it's Intel marketing. Take dies that fail QA, rebrand them as "Xeon", and sell just below i7. That is exactly what they are doing. The dies that work at low voltage get sold as i7 with a TDP of 65W, while the ones that need more voltage or have a broken GPU get the GPU disabled and are sold as the low end Xeon. So you might get a Xeon that runs at 65W but is a xeon simply because
On Fri, Jul 01, 2016 at 12:30:56PM -0400, William Park via talk wrote: the GPU was broken, or you might get one with a perfectly working GPU but which needed a bit more than 65W to do the specs. Either way you get what intel promised. You might get better than that, but no promises from intel.
It would be kind of scary to think that the Intel server processors are just failed consumer products. Does that mean that they are also turning off the ECC in the I7? What about the ECC in the cache( I know some processors carry ECC through the cache but not sure about Intel )? -- Alvin Starr || voice: (905)513-7688 Netvel Inc. || Cell: (416)806-0133 alvin@netvel.net ||