The new CPU series is based on the “Zen 5” core architecture, and offers a broad range of core counts spanning from 8 to 192.
The AMD EPYC 9005 Series CPUs includes the new 64 core AMD EPYC 9575F, which cranked up to 5GHz targets GPU powered AI solutions.
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"The EPYC 9575F, can use its 5GHz max frequency boost to help a 1,000 node AI cluster drive up to 700,000 more inference tokens per second," AMD stated in its official announcement.
“From powering the world’s fastest supercomputers, to leading enterprises, to the largest Hyperscalers, AMD has earned the trust of customers who value demonstrated performance, innovation and energy efficiency,” said Dan McNamara, senior vice president and general manager, server business, AMD.
“With five generations of on-time roadmap execution, AMD has proven it can meet the needs of the data center market and give customers the standard for data center performance, efficiency, solutions and capabilities for cloud, enterprise and AI workloads.”
According to AMD, with its EPYC 9965 processor-based servers, customers can expect significant performance improvements in their real world applications and workloads compared to rival Intel Xeon 8592+ CPU-based servers, with:
AMD claims its 192 core EPYC 9965 CPU has up to 3.7X the performance on end-to-end AI workloads, which are critical for driving an efficient approach to generative AI.
The entire lineup of 5th Gen AMD EPYC processors is available today, with support from Cisco, Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo and Supermicro as well as all major ODMs and cloud service providers.