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by JF-AMD 5989 days ago
We have looked into that, but that is not our strategy. If we knew that SMT (in an x86 architecture) could lead to an "always better performance" environment, it might be more applealing. But the fact that the performance aspect becomes application dependent (and there are possible stability situations), we defer to no SMT.

If future implementations do a better job it would be something to consider.

For now we believe that actual cores will drive better performance. If I can put 12 cores into the same price and power envelopes (or even lower) as my competitor's 6-core with SMT, I end up with a better processor.

Cores vs. SMT breaks down if your cores are consuming significantly more power or you are driving your cost up. But if you are not doing those things, than cores over SMT becomes the right call.