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Presenting 'Cascade at the Bat': A Bad Intel CPU Poem

Presenting "Cascade at the Bat", a bit of wretched-but-hopefully-funny poetry I wrote a few years ago. Of all the things I've ever published, this is definitely one of them.
By Joel Hruska
Cascade-WIP2

I wrote this poem -- "poem" -- around the time Intel launched Cascade Lake back in 2019. I held off publishing back then because I didn't want to leave people thinking we'd reviewed a CPU in truly bad poetry instead of my typical second-rate prose. I also didn't want it to come off as mean-spirited. I set it aside and forgot I wrote it, only to rediscover it again this week.

"Cascade at the Bat" is a parody of "Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic, Sung in the Year 1888." The primary difference between "Cascade" and "Casey(Opens in a new window)" is that the latter is a beloved and well-known piece of comedic poetry, while the former is... unlikely to achieve this worthy station. Some of the feedback I received when I shared my magnum dopus with friends is reprinted verbatim below:

Praise Words From Readers Describing "Cascade at the Bat"

"A gem worthy of McGonagall(Opens in a new window)." (This is the antipode of a compliment).

"It's definitely a thing you spent time making. We have but a finite time on this planet, and this is how you chose to spend some of yours. I respect that, even if I don't understand it."

"Proof that anyone can write poetry. Anyone. Oh God, anyone."

"You are one of my very favourite people for so many reasons. This both is and is not one of them. 10/10 for the way your mind works; 1/10 poetry."

Without further ado, I present:

Cascade At the Bat

The outlook wasn't brilliant for the Intel chip that day The score stood 32-18, with no threads left to play With core counts insufficient and clock speed all but gone,

No one knew what to expect when Cascade stepped on the lawn.

It wasn't very long ago that Intel ruled the game Conroe, Penryn, and Westmere all caused Sunnyvale great pain Then came Sandy, Ivy, Haswell -- great hitters, one and all Collectively they owned the field

And fed AMD the ball.

But lo', a new inning of the game began in 2017 Once AMD at last debuted a capable machine After years of piles(Opens in a new window) driven by a CPU disaster

Ryzen routed Kaby Lake, and proved itself much faster

Now, was Intel frightened? No! For this had happened once before When Prescott launched -- and shat the bed -- back in 2004 Intel poured a cup of Coffee and admitted no mistake

Instead, it booked itself a stay on scenic Stagnant Lake.

Then Zen 2 debuted on 7, and it gave Team Red the lead While Intel sat, stuck on 14, despite its growing need An endless stream of plusses replaced Tick-Tock as a guide

And Intel turned to price cuts as its process scaling died.

Cascade's workstation bloodline is writ plainly on the chip Xeon owns this market, despite 10-nanometer's slip. Priced to move and thrice-refined, the core takes a batting stance

Its rival is irrelevant, Threadripper scarcely earns a glance.

And here's the starting benchmark: It's a render test well-known But when the scores appear on-screen, the crowd lets out a moan. Now that the run is over, AMD has clearly won,

"Cinebench!?" spat Cascade Lake, and the reviewer said: "Strike one!"

A second app is readied: a Qt compiler test This type of application is where Chipzilla scores the best Intel's core stood watching, as the final tallies flew

"That's not real world!" cried Cascade, while the reviewer called: "Strike two!"

All pretense gone, at ease no more, Cascade rethinks its tack SIMD math may yet disrupt its rival's product stack. There's one more test still left to score before the end of day

MATLAB is the perfect choice to keep its foe at bay.

The droops are gone from Cascade's clock, its SIMD offsets all read "None." With thermal limits set aside, its heat could melt the sun. The reviewer queues the MATLAB run, mouse pointer on "Begin"

Cascade leaps for the finish line -- this task, it's sure to win!

Matlab performance from our Oh, somewhere in this favored land, the sun is beaming down Somewhere fanboys argue, and somewhere gamers frown From Movidius to Mobileye, Intel still has clout

But as far as Threadripper's concerned -- mighty Cascade has struck out.

Original image by Loren Javier, Flickr(Opens in a new window), CC BY-ND 2.0 Now Read:

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AMD Intel Bad Poetry Semiconductors Cascade Lake

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