Testseek.com have collected 7 expert reviews of the AMD EPYC 7003 3.5GHz Socket SP3 and the average rating is 0%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD EPYC 7003 3.5GHz Socket SP3.
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Published: 2022-03-21, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: Today the AMD EPYC 7003 Milan-X processors are officially shipping. See my AMD EPYC 7773X Linux review for more details and plenty of benchmarks. The 768MB of L3 cache per CPU won't be of benefit to all workloads, just as the forthcoming Ryzen 7 5800X3D i...
Published: 2021-10-19, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: Announced earlier this year for Google Cloud was a new family of virtual machines called Tau VMs. The initial T2D instances are powered by AMD EPYC 7003 "Milan" processors to deliver leading performance and are also positioned to deliver great value in go...
Published: 2021-04-19, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: One of the exciting elements of last month's AMD EPYC 7003 "Milan" series launch was having same-day availability in public clouds. Microsoft as one of AMD's cloud partners worked closely to deliver launch-day availability in their public cloud using EPYC...
Published: 2021-04-09, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: Following last month's launch of the AMD EPYC 7003 "Milan" series prominent motherboard vendors have been fairly quick to enable Milan support for capable motherboards originally launched for the prior EPYC 7002 "Rome" processors. For those in the market...
Published: 2021-03-15, Author: Marco , review by: hothardware.com
Abstract: AMD just launched its next-generation EPYC server processors, codenamed Milan, based on the company's leading Zen 3 microarchitecture. The new EPYC 7003 series is an important milestone for AMD. The company has made significant in-roads in servers and da...
Published: 2021-03-15, Author: Rob , review by: techgage.com
Abstract: It was four years ago this month when AMD announced its EPYC processor series, which marked the company's triumphant return to the battle at the heart of the data center. Out-of-the-gate, AMD offered 32 core options with dual socket (2P) potential, giving...
Published: 2020-12-14, Author: Ben , review by: hothardware.com
Abstract: Zen 3-based Ryzen processors showed some really outstanding performance on the desktop when we looked at the Ryzen 9 5900X and 5950X. In the high-performance computing server space, though, 12 to 16 cores is the bare minimum, and systems only scale up fr...