The most cost effective way to export for MacOS
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@Lindon I've just been reading up on them and they seem quite good. There's one that's just been released which has a slightly lower core count than the i9 I was looking at, but the clock speed is higher, it has AMD Graphics, and the TDP is only 35W. I'll do some more research but AMD doesn't seem like a bad choice at all.
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@d-healey my question will sound silly but, what about IPP? if you have amd processors or other processor?
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It works there too but I think I read somewhere that Intel is making them intentionally slower on foreign CPUs. Not sure if its IPP too or just their own compiler.
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@Lindon said in The most cost effective way to export for MacOS:
@d-healey sounds like I'm even less skilled than yourself about what makes a good CPU, all I really know is the Rayzen CPUs are (apparently) kicking butt all over the intel ones these days an "bang-for-buck"
I might build a thread ripper rig to see what's up
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Seems the latest APUs are only available for OEMs :(
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I've always been an Intel user, 10th gen i9 10850K (5.0 GHz overclocked for all 10 cores with a liquid cooler). I am happy with it.
But Intel has made very bad strategic mistakes lately. High price, low improvements. Intel stucked 14 nm process node architecture, even the AMD uses 7 nm for years- ARM uses 5 nm! In the past, the best Intel performance (compared to AMD) was the single core speed, but it seems like the latest AMD Ryzen cpus beats Intel for that too. Even Intel PCI Express 4.0 support come 2 years later than AMD did.
Acording to the reports, PCI Express 4.0 supported 11th gen i9 cpu doesn't seem to give great performance like it should (even on the single core performance!) And it falls the way beyond the competitors.
I think ARM will be the next winner for all in case of power usage, performance and AI technology. And of course Intel has beeing forced to be adapted to the new technology trend.
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This blog may be of interest:
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Looks like Ryzen might not be the best choice for a passive system due to power consumption - https://hattedsquirrel.net/2020/12/power-consumption-of-ryzen-5000-series-cpus/
This stuff gives me a headache.
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So I went with a Ryzen 5900 in the end (thanks Lindon). I'll probably switch to one of the APUs when they become available to the public. I made a semi-passive build as Christoph suggested, with an ITX motherboard and a humongous heatsink.
I've power limited (65W) and undervolted the CPU to keep things nice and cool. Idle temps are around 43C and I think I can improve on this with more tweaking. I've set the fans to only turn on when the temps are above 45, but I think I'll increase this to 50.
The graphics card uses more power than the CPU at idle and produces a fair bit of heat, so switching to an APU in the future should help with that.
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@d-healey Sir, How much this Cost?
And can you Share the details of the PC? -
@d-healey - good grief - what a heat sink!
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And I got this case - https://www.scan.co.uk/products/cooler-master-masterbox-nr200p-white-mini-tower-w-tempered-glass-window-2x-120mm-fans-usb-32-gen1-mi
The graphics card is a Palit 1050TI. I don't know if it's still possible to buy it (certainly not at a reasonable price) I've had this one for about 5 years.
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@d-healey said in The most cost effective way to export for MacOS:
The graphics card is a Palit 1050TI. I don't know if it's still possible to buy it (certainly not at a reasonable price) I've had this one for about 5 years.
I'm using an RTX3090 here. Lightning fast for 3D renders, and I mine Bitcoin when it's not in use
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@d-healey unfortunately not. It's has a cooling system that rivals a commercial rooftop HVAC
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@Christoph-Hart What kind of temps do you see with your semi-passive system? Now I've put my system into its new case the temps are pretty firm at 52C but it's a little toasty for my taste.
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A CPU can handle 100C so I wouldn‘t worry.
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I changed the CPU governor from schedutil to conservative and now I'm at 45C.
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I just did a benchmark with the new CPU compiling HISE (debug build so linking time is negligable).
8 threads: 1.50 minutes
10 threads: 1.51 minutes
20 threads: 1.37 minutesSo my recommendation is not to spend extra on a 5900x if your main use is software development.
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Digging up this thread because I'm going to have a go building an Alder Lake system and see how it compares with the Ryzen.
My updated build times with the Ryzen 5900x since I did more tweaking to my system settings over the last few months
8 threads: 1m 5s
10 threads: 0m 57s
12 threads: 0m 51s
20 threads: 0m 47s
22 threads: 0m 46sThe extra cores/threads still show diminishing returns.