AMD 3rd Gen EPYC 7763 ‘Milan’ Zen 3 CPU Pictured, 64 Cores, 128 Threads, 2.45 GHz Base & 3.5 GHz Boost Clocks On Early Sample

AMD 3rd Gen EPYC 7763 ‘Milan’ Zen 3 CPU Pictured, 64 Cores, 128 Threads, 2.45 GHz Base & 3.5 GHz Boost Clocks On Early Sample

4 years ago
Anonymous $RGO3jP_V_c

https://wccftech.com/amd-3rd-gen-epyc-7763-milan-zen-3-cpu-spotted-64-cores-pictured-3-5-ghz-boost-clocks/

An AMD 3rd Gen EPYC Milan-based server processor has been pictured which is branded as the EPYC 7763 and seems to be an early sample of the next-generation server CPU lineup. The AMD EPYC 7763 'Milan' CPU pictures were posted by a Chiphell Forum member (via Momomo_Us)  who also shared the screens of the CPU running along with its reported clock speeds.

The 3rd Gen EPYC Milan lineup is expected to start shipping later this year with full availability planned for next year. It looks like the first chips have indeed started shipping within time and these next-generation server processors have now started appearing more frequently in online benchmark databases. We previously saw the EPYC 7713 'Milan' CPU which destroyed four Intel Xeon Platinum chips in perf/$ figures.

AMD 3rd Gen EPYC 7763 ‘Milan’ Zen 3 CPU Pictured, 64 Cores, 128 Threads, 2.45 GHz Base & 3.5 GHz Boost Clocks On Early Sample

Nov 12, 2020, 2:37pm UTC
https://wccftech.com/amd-3rd-gen-epyc-7763-milan-zen-3-cpu-spotted-64-cores-pictured-3-5-ghz-boost-clocks/ > An AMD 3rd Gen EPYC Milan-based server processor has been pictured which is branded as the EPYC 7763 and seems to be an early sample of the next-generation server CPU lineup. The AMD EPYC 7763 'Milan' CPU pictures were posted by a Chiphell Forum member (via Momomo_Us)  who also shared the screens of the CPU running along with its reported clock speeds. > The 3rd Gen EPYC Milan lineup is expected to start shipping later this year with full availability planned for next year. It looks like the first chips have indeed started shipping within time and these next-generation server processors have now started appearing more frequently in online benchmark databases. We previously saw the EPYC 7713 'Milan' CPU which destroyed four Intel Xeon Platinum chips in perf/$ figures.