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Ice Lake SP and zen3 based Epyc server CPUs on GeekBench

Scouring Geekbench I found something quite interesting, in the remote section of CPUs without a name you can often find Engineering samples and prototypes, and here I found these:
https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/6415953
https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/6801137

 

These are two skews of Ice Lake DE (even though I think it might be Ice Lake SP), respectively a 36 core one (GenuineIntel Family 6 Model 106 Stepping 5) and a 24 core one (GenuineIntel Family 6 Model 106 Stepping 4), these 10nm CPUs use the LGA 4189 socket and feature 8 DDR4 memory channels, up to 3200 MT/s.

The platform is called Whitley, while the CPU supports PCIe 4.0 the chipset, C621A doesn't seem to.

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One of these submissions uses the Supermicro X12DDW-A6, which hasn't been launched yet, but is part of the X12 generation.

This is a dual CPU datacenter optimized motherboard used in their WIO series servers, the specific model here is the Supermicro SYS-610C-TR

 

Searching for submissions that used the X12DDW-A6 we find a Intel Xeon Gold 6330N, which is a 16 core 32 thread CPU

 

Using the Supermicro X12DPU-6 is an Intel Xeon Gold 6330, a 28 core CPU.

This also is also a dual CPU motherboard, for some unknown UIO series server.

 

Anyways, in single core these xeons seem quite fast, the best one in this regard is on par with a Ryzen 5 3600, if we can trust geekbench that is...

 

Even more interesting is the zen3 based Epyc 7643, a 48 core CPU that rivals the 3800x and the 9700k in single core, in multi core though this CPU is much faster than even  the Threadripper 3990x, with less cores...

The motherboard used is the Wiwynn SV302A-U, which tells me absolutely nothing

 

Main PC [The Rig of Theseus]:

CPU: i5-8600K @ 5.0 GHz | GPU: GTX 1660 | RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3000 MHz | Case: Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic | PSU: Corsair RM 650i | SSD: Corsair MP510 480 GB |  HDD: 2x 6 TB WD Red| Motherboard: Gigabyte Z390 Aorus Pro | OS: Windows 11 Pro for Workstations

 

Secondary PC [Why did I bother]:

CPU: AMD Athlon 3000G | GPU: Vega 3 iGPU | RAM: 8 GB DDR4 3000 MHz | Case: Corsair 88R | PSU: Corsair VS 650 | SSD: WD Green M.2 SATA 120 GB | Motherboard: MSI A320M-A PRO MAX | OS: Windows 11 Pro for Workstations

 

Server [Solution in search of a problem]:

Model: HP DL360e Gen8 | CPU: 1x Xeon E5-2430L v1 | RAM: 12 GB DDR3 1066 MHz | SSD: Kingston A400 120 GB | OS: VMware ESXi 7

 

Server 2 electric boogaloo [A waste of electricity]:

Model: intel NUC NUC5CPYH | CPU: Celeron N3050 | RAM: 2GB DDR3L 1600 MHz | SSD: Kingston UV400 120 GB | OS: Debian Bullseye

 

Laptop:

Model: ThinkBook 14 Gen 2 AMD | CPU: Ryzen 7 4700U | RAM: 16 GB DDR4 3200 MHz | OS: Windows 11 Pro

 

Photography:

 

Cameras:

Full Frame digital: Sony α7

APS-C digital: Sony α100

Medium Format Film: Kodak Junior SIX-20

35mm Film:

 

Lenses:

Sony SAL-1870 18-70mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 

Sony SAL-75300 75-300mm ƒ/4.5-5.6

Meike MK-50mm ƒ/1.7

 

PSA: No, I didn't waste all that money on computers, (except the main one) my server cost $40, the intel NUC was my old PC (although then it had 8GB of ram, I gave the bigger stick of ram to a person who really needed it), my laptop is used and the second PC is really cheap.

I like tinkering with computers and have a personal hatred towards phones and everything they represent (I daily drive an iPhone 7, or a 6, depends on which one works that day)

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