Skip to main content

Believe it or not, AMD and Nvidia are teaming up

AMD presenting its new Turin CPUs.
AMD

They’re mortal enemies. Sworn rivals. The two top names when it comes to the best graphics cards, duking it out even over petty performance difference. And yet, AMD and Nvidia are partnering for the launch of Team Red’s 5th-gen Epyc server CPUs, code-named Turin.

Through what AMD called a “technical partnership,” Nvidia is providing guidance on how to pair its HGX and MGX data center GPU clusters with AMD’s new Epyc CPUs. Despite the fact that AMD makes its own Instinct AI accelerators, the partnership seems like a read on reality. Customers will want to use Nvidia GPUs with AMD CPUs, and the two companies came together to provide that guidance.

A slide showing the partnership between AMD and Nvidia.
AMD

And that’s a good thing because AMD’s new data center chips look mighty impressive. The bedrock they are built on is the Zen 5 architecture that we saw in CPUs like the Ryzen 9 9950X and Ryzen 9900X, but massively expanded. You can see the dizzying product stack below, which ranges from CPUs from eight cores all the way up to a massive chip packing 192 of AMD’s Zen 5c cores. And as a cherry on top, the sweet spot 64-core 9575F can hit 5GHz — a first for AMD’s data center chips.

Product stack for Epyc 9005 CPUs.
AMD

AMD is showing some pretty massive performance gains, too — 2.7x the performance on the SPEC CPU benchmark compared to an Intel Emerald Rapid Xeon CPU, and up to four times the enterprise performance, which looks at transcoding video. Intel just recently launched its Granite Rapid Xeon CPUs, but AMD didn’t share any performance numbers for those chips.

Performance of Epyc 9005 CPUs.
AMD

Turin CPUs are massive, and it’s no wonder that Nvidia is working with AMD to provide guidance to customers. Still, AMD isn’t down for the count when it comes to data center GPUs. The company formally launched its new Instinct MI325X AI accelerator alongside Turin CPUs, which it previously previewed at Computex earlier this year. A single GPU packs 256GB of HBM3E memory, and when organized into a cluster, AMD says the platform can support up to 2TB of HBM3E memory and 48TB/s of memory bandwidth.

Specs for AMD's MI325X platform.
AMD

AMD is still gunning after Nvidia’s AI crown with the GPU, too. The company showed the MI325X outperforming Nvidia’s H200 in AI inference and providing performance parity in AI training. Nvidia has moved onto its Blackwell data center GPUs, but the H200 comparison is still fair given how rapidly AI hardware is rolling out these days.

Performance of AMD's MI325X.
AMD

Although most of the readers here at Digital Trends will never interact directly with this hardware, it’s still nice to look and gawk at just how much power companies like AMD can squeeze onto a CPU. Behind the scenes, AMD’s Epyc CPUs help power dozens of services we all interact with every day, from Netflix to Snapchat and beyond.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Intel’s Battlemage might beat Nvidia and AMD to the punch
Intel Arc A770 GPU installed in a test bench.

Out of all the GPU news we've been getting in the last few weeks, information about Intel Arc Battlemage has been pretty scarce, Now, it appears that Intel might still surprise us. According to a new leak, Intel's next-gen desktop GPUs might join the ranks of the best graphics cards as early as next month. Launching in December would certainly give Intel an unexpected edge over AMD and Nvidia, and it's an edge that it could really use right now.

As always with these types of leaks, we're working with a vague message and reading into it to try and figure out what's going on. In this instance, the gossip comes from Golden Pig Upgrade Pack on Weibo, a user with a pretty good reputation.

Read more
The humble bumblebee just messed things up for Meta
A close-up of a bee.

The humble bumblebee has played a part in obstructing an ambitious construction project by Meta, according to a Financial Times (FT) report.

The Mark Zuckerberg-led tech giant has apparently had to abandon a plan to build a nuclear-powered AI data center partly because a rare bee species has been found on the land where the facility would have been built.

Read more
AMD’s Ryzen 7 9800X3D is official, and it shakes things up in a big way
Pads on the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D.

We all knew it was coming. A string of rumors over the past several months has pointed to AMD releasing the Ryzen 7 9800X3D on November 7, but the company itself just confirmed the new CPU. It's looking for a spot among the best processors, packing 3D V-Cache on top of an eight-core Zen 5 CPU in order to improve gaming performance.

True to rumors we've seen this week, AMD is pricing the CPU at $479, which is nearly $30 more expensive than the Ryzen 7 7800X3D. AMD claims that the new chip provides an average gaming increase of 8% over the last-gen CPU, and 20% faster gaming performance compared to Intel's recent Core Ultra 9 285K. In addition, AMD says that minimum frame rates are up, with the Ryzen 7 9800X3D improving 1% lows in The Last of Us Part One by 31%.

Read more