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Intel’s new quartet of 18-core Xeon E7 chips offer different flavors of fast

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Intel may be focused on making smaller, more energy-efficient processors for consumer products, but when it comes to Xeon-based workstations, all upgrading efforts are concentrated on raw speed and core count. And those all-important metrics are about to get a nice bump: In a few months the Xeon family will reportedly include a slew of 18-core Haswell members.

Currently, the only such beast is an E5-2699v3, capable of up to 2.3GHz “normal” clock rates, or 3.6GHz in Turbo Boost mode. For their part, the upcoming 18-core Xeon E7s will run at between 2.0GHz and 2.5GHz base frequencies, the sky then being the limit for Turbo velocity.

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If rumors are to be trusted, and they’re backed by pretty solid evidence, server admins should gear up for some difficult decision-making, with choice the word du jour for Intel’s Xeon refresh. There are no less than four 18-core whoppers in the pipeline, each gifted enough to double the figure with Hyperthreading enabled. The least potent chip, the E7-8880Lv3, is naturally the most frugal of the bunch, delivering a maximum of 115W TDP.

That’s 30 watts of heat less than the only 18-core available right now, the E5-2699v3. Meanwhile, the new E7-8870v3 and E7-8880v3 are rated at 140W thermal design power, and the bleeding-edge 2.5GHz Xeon E7-8890v3 is as fiery as it’s punchy, with 165W TDP.

Now, if it’s record-setting clock speed that you’re after, the 4-core Xeon E7-8893v3 is actually your go-to steamroller, topping out at 3.2GHz. The 10-core 165W Xeon E7-8891v3 is no pushover either, at 2.8GHz.

It’s also worth pointing out the roster’s largest L3 caches sit at a comfy 45MB, and DDR4 support will be offered across the board. Not to mention new AVX (Advanced Vector Extensions) and TSX (Transactional Synchronization Extensions) instructions.

Overall, you’re looking at substantial but not quite game-changing improvements, which is why the 12 Xeon E7s are expected out sometime “next quarter”, i.e. between April and June. Just because Intel’s Haswell microarchitecture is about to turn two years old, and its succeeding die has a sequel of its own rapidly approaching, it doesn’t mean its days are numbered. At least, not in servers.

Adrian Diaconescu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adrian is a mobile aficionado since the days of the Nokia 3310, and a PC enthusiast since Windows 98. Later, he discovered…
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