Comment by d_silin

14 hours ago

It is a 88-core ARM v9 chip, for somewhat more detailed spec.

Hmm, the 128-core Ampere Altra CPU is already available, and in a case from System76. I wonder what else differentiates it.

If they're going to build CPUs I wish they had used Risc-V instead. They are using it somewhat already.

  • I own one of these systems. My interpretation is the Ampere systems are targeted at lower cost scale out. The Ampere Altra CPUs are limited to DDR4. The raw single core performance doesn’t match Intel or AMD offerings. You get a lot of cores for a lower hardware cost and at lower energy usage.

    The Nvidia CPUs are designed for a very specific use case. They are designed for high performance with less concern about cost control.

    The newer AmpereOne CPUs use DDR5 with the AmpereOne M supporting even higher memory bandwidth. Even then, I doubt the AmpereOne CPUs will match the performance of the Nvidia Rubin CPUs. But the Ampere processors are available for general use. I am guessing that Nvidia is only going to sell the complete rack system and only to high-volume customers.

Vera does what NVIDIA calls Spatial Multithreading, "physically partitioning each core’s resources rather than time slicing them, allowing the system to optimize for performance or density at runtime." A kind of static hyperthreading; you get two threads per core.

It's somewhat different from how x86 chips do simultaneous multithreading (SMT),