I don’t think Threadripper shouldn’t be compared to Xeon, TR is a desktop chip, in the same market segment as intels x299 platform i7 and i9 HEDT chips a more direct comparison should be with AMDs Epyc platform, which is also making big strides in the server/ datacenter side. I’m not sure how different their architectures are. But in the consumer desktop space AMD are really shaking the intel tree. intel has stalled for years whilst AMD has cought up, competition is good and the Performance gap for consumers is closing or in some cases has flipped. I just got my daughter a Ryzen (3500u)windows laptop for school and it performs the same or better than the equivalent intel model (i5-8265u) with a better GPU, for much lower price. there are people out there that are running AMD hackintosh machines via a vm hyper visor dedicating one core to the VM managment and the rest of the cores to run the Mac, and the extra cores are brute force outperforming current macs on cheaper chips. Sorry for the rambling
Intel uses Xeon branding for workstation CPU’s and server CPU’s. It’s a hangover from the mid-90’s where you had Celeron, Pentium or Xeon.
The W Xeons in the 7,1 Mac Pro are Workstation Xeons. They are direct competition to TR, which is also a workstation CPU.
i7/i9 is high end desktop. 3800-3950X is also high end desktop. The exception being the 10980XE or others like it. With 48 PCIe lanes, it has a bit more expansion than any Ryzen part. Those are kind of “W Xeon lite” chips and line up against TR in some respects and 3800-3950X in core count and CPU performance.
Xeon Scalable is Epyc’s competition.
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