Hello you fine Internet folks,Here at CES 2026, AMD showed off their upcoming Venice series of server CPUs and their upcoming MI400 series of datacenter accelerators. AMD has talked about the specifications of both Venice and the MI400 series at their Advancing AI event back in June of 2025, but this is the first time AMD has shown off the silicon for both of product lines.Starting with Venice, the first thing to notice is the packaging of the CCDs to the IO dies is different. Instead of using the organic substrate of the package to run the wires between the CCDs and the IO dies that AMD has used since EPYC Rome, Venice appears to be using a more advanced form of packaging similar to Strix Halo or MI250X. Another change is that Venice appears to have two IO dies instead of the single IO die that the prior EPYC CPUs had.Venice has 8 CCDs each of which have 32 cores for a total of up to 256 cores per Venice package. Doing some measuring of each of the dies, you get that each CCD is approximately 165mm2 of N2 silicon. If AMD has stuck to 4MB of L3 per core than each of these CCDs have 32 Zen 6 cores and 128MB of L3 cache along with the die to die interface for the CCD <-> IO die communications. At approximately 165mm2 per CCD, that would make a Zen 6 core plus the 4MB of L3 per core about 5mm2 each which is similar to Zen 5鈥檚 approximately 5.34mm2 on N3 when counting both the Zen 5 core and 4MB of L3 cache.Moving to the IO dies, they each appear to be approximately 353mm2 for a total of just over 700mm2 of silicon dedicated for the IO dies. This is a massive increase from the approximately 400mm2 that the prior EPYC CPUs dedicated for their IO dies. The two IO dies appear to be using an advanced packaging of some kind similar to the CCDs. Next to the IO dies appear to be 8 little dies, 4 on each side of the package, which are likely to either be structural silicon or deep trench capacitor dies meant to improve power delivery to the CCDs and IO dies.Shifting off of Veni...
First seen: 2026-01-06 22:39
Last seen: 2026-01-07 14:43