Thanks for the feedback. Releasing videos in 4K is something we're looking into, but we have to weigh up the time and storage required to shoot at a higher resolution than 1080p. - JG
Simple yet informative video. Thank you guys. Personally I see the 5th gen Xeon as a "refresh" to the 4th gen (same story goes for the Intel core 14th gen). Later this year intel will introduce CPUs with smaller transistors, which should be very cool (including SKUs with 288 cores!). The main reason why one would pick an Intel Xeon over and AMD EPYC is probably the accelerators - assuming you have a software that can leverage them, otherwise the higher core count AMD provides may be beneficial.
It's almost impossible to give a simple answer to this as server workloads vary so much, but.... in general I think it's fair to say that 4th gen EPYC still has a lead over 5th gen Xeon as they have: more cores, more PCIe lanes and higher memory bandwidth. AMD's architecture also appears to be more efficient than Intel's. Select (but not all models) of 5th (and 4th gen) Xeons do have workload specific accelerators that might give them an edge in some applications, but that's going to be down to ISV support. - JG
I'm afraid not, 5th gen Xeon Scalable are new CPUs for Socket 4677 for C740 boards. X99 boards are for Xeon E5 v3 Socket 2011 processors from 2014. - JG
I wonder when Scan will upgrade their UA-cam video format from 1080p to 4k 🤔
Thanks for the feedback. Releasing videos in 4K is something we're looking into, but we have to weigh up the time and storage required to shoot at a higher resolution than 1080p. - JG
Simple yet informative video. Thank you guys. Personally I see the 5th gen Xeon as a "refresh" to the 4th gen (same story goes for the Intel core 14th gen). Later this year intel will introduce CPUs with smaller transistors, which should be very cool (including SKUs with 288 cores!). The main reason why one would pick an Intel Xeon over and AMD EPYC is probably the accelerators - assuming you have a software that can leverage them, otherwise the higher core count AMD provides may be beneficial.
That's a very fair assessment, 5th gen is definitely a smaller step forward than 4th gen; but it still has some welcome improvements. - JG
love your presentation, thanks
Thanks for watching! - JG
lady, you explain perfectly, well done
Thanks for the feedback. What do sort of topics would you like us to cover text? - JG
how do the new xeons compare to the newest epycs on the market for datacenter work?
It's almost impossible to give a simple answer to this as server workloads vary so much, but.... in general I think it's fair to say that 4th gen EPYC still has a lead over 5th gen Xeon as they have: more cores, more PCIe lanes and higher memory bandwidth. AMD's architecture also appears to be more efficient than Intel's. Select (but not all models) of 5th (and 4th gen) Xeons do have workload specific accelerators that might give them an edge in some applications, but that's going to be down to ISV support. - JG
@@scanitsolutions alright thanks for the info, amd has had such a large gap over intel for so long on server chips its good too see some competition
Happy to help, and yeah we agree that it's great to see competition in the server CPU market. - JG
5th gen intel. So these work with X99 boards?
I'm afraid not, 5th gen Xeon Scalable are new CPUs for Socket 4677 for C740 boards. X99 boards are for Xeon E5 v3 Socket 2011 processors from 2014. - JG