Rechercher dans ce blog

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

AMD isn't just buying from TSMC, TSMC is buying EPYC chips from AMD - PC Gamer

proc.indah.link

TSMC has announced that it's using AMD EPYC processors to power workloads for its manufacturing business. Yup, TSMC is using chips it has produced to make the chips it produces. To be fair, this is a recent upgrade to its data centers, so it's not like it had to partake in time travel to achieve this seemingly paradoxical situation. 

In case it wasn't obvious, TSMC is not a small company—over 50,000 people work for the manufacturing giant, across sites in Taiwan, Europe, Japan, China, and the United States. TSMC is using HPE's DL324 G10 platform, which runs 2nd-gen AMD EPYC 7702 CPUs with 64 cores, a base clock of 2GHz, and a boost of 3.35GHz. 

While TSMC and AMD already have a working relationship, apparently it wasn't a given that it would use AMD's hardware for its own servers, and had to show benefits over the competition. Something that it apparently managed due to the excellent power efficiency AMD EPYC offers thanks to TSMC's 7nm production process. 

TSMC has clearly been impressed with its experiences with EPYC so far and plans to implement two more data centers in 2021. It's also looking at the new EPYC 7F72 CPU for its manufacturing teams. These CPUs have 24 cores and a base clock of 3.2GHz, with the higher clock speeds being the clincher here.

A closer working relationship between AMD and TSMC can only mean good things for AMD going forward, although we doubt this would directly lead to more preferential treatment. Although anything to get more silicon out of TSMC would be welcome—particularly GPUs, which have been almost impossible to track down since the original launch. 

The Link Lonk


May 05, 2021 at 11:40PM
https://ift.tt/2SkNkbM

AMD isn't just buying from TSMC, TSMC is buying EPYC chips from AMD - PC Gamer

https://ift.tt/2ZDueh5
AMD

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

Intel Falls on Latest Server Chip Delay; Rival AMD Gains - Yahoo Finance

proc.indah.link (Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp. fell after saying a new version of its Xeon server chip line will go into production in 2022, r...

Popular Posts