Nemesis 1
Lifer
- Dec 30, 2006
- 11,366
- 2
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Interesting. But I doubt Nv is going anywhere it has plans of its own . As does Intel with SB .
http://www.fudzilla.com/content/view/17576/1/
http://www.fudzilla.com/content/view/17576/1/
What is naive is for anyone to suppose that Intel is sleeping. None thought that Clarkdale IGP would be as good as it is . As many are aware Intel has found away to offload IGP to work the cpu. It is also naive to suppose Intel needs Dx11. Since they already said they don't. DX11 is a MS thing . Than one has to consider AVX to not do so is naive as it gets. Its going to be interesting . But I putting my money on SB to shock and awl.
What usual rules are you speaking of. Intels sandy with 2 ondie Gpus will not = whatever AMD comes up with .SB with dual IGP and AVX looks very formidable. This is the same as Clarkdale befor release . I lot of talk about intel IGP without ever seeing what it could do . Than you have AMD PHII up against Intels sandy both with fusion and you suppose AMD has the upperhand . Thats not even good logic infact it lacks logic of any degree.
You are the one saying that Intel is offloading work from the GPU to the CPU. You are the one who has your facts backwards and it is your unintelligible and sloppy use of language that makes it even more difficult for others to tailor a response. People can either ignore you or they have to somehow sift through your absurd misspellings to make any sense out of your clumsy statements, acquiesce to your bias while laying out facts that you will ultimately ignore. You must understand that it is not at all a pleasure to read your posts, let alone reply to them.
If you have kept track of any integration trends in the past ten years you will see that the general purpose of graphics integration is to move work from the CPU to the GPU and *not* the other way around. The CPU is large and power hungry and if you don't need it, you should keep it idle for as long as possible. You can't just use half a core if you need to get a job done. You have to power up the whole core and even your straightforward SIMD-like video acceleration runs down the entire pipeline of that core (which by itself has a greater TDP than most IGPs). If you had the slightest idea what you were talking about, you would have no objection to the obvious trends we are moving along because you would see that specialized integration is a higher performance, more efficient solution than software emulation on a gargantuan general purpose CPU.
Why do something at 35w when it can be done with only 10 or 15 watts? That's why we do it on the GPU. Integrating GPU hardware onto the die of the CPU does not change this fact (in fact it exaggerates it) because it is the very nature of having small/abundant execution units versus a handful of large ones.
Between the Phenom II cores and 480 shaders, the Llano device is looking at 700-800 SP gigaflops, or about ~300 DP gflops. 8 sandy bridge cores @ 4 GHz will only hit 256 DP gflops. 256 gigaflops is not far away from 300 gigaflops, but hopefully you will see that as this trend pans out over time, compute shaders will prove to be faster and more flexible than SSE registers and they don't clog up the CPU and waste power. That's why everyone including intel has plans to incorporate coprocessing on the IGP. Both the vector acceleration from the Llano IGP and Sandy AVX are nonnative and will require software developers to include support.
You can speculate all you want about the performance you would like to see from intel, but the math is right there waiting for you if you can do it. Intel has the better CPU *per thread* and that isn't going to change for at least the next few years, but intel will need 512-bit or kilobit vectors if they expect x86 to compete with GPGPU in terms of aggregate floating point throughput (with regard to GPGPU devices like LLano or larger:480 to 3200 shaders). The cost of double-precision FP on shaders is going down while the cost of widening your vector units is going up. Intel most certainly is not diving into kilobit vectors right away; it would not be a long term solution as more shaders are brought onto the IGP. They are doing the smart thing and going for LRBni with the Haswell IGP. Accelerated GPGPU will proliferate slowly and they can afford to sit out this round.
Sandy Bridge IGPs will not be LRBni-enabled (nor OpenCL/Dx11) and will only provide video acceleration like the current GMAs. They will not accelerate x86 as was envisioned with larrabee/haswell IGPs. And where did you read that Sandy Bridge will have dual IGPs? This is why people ignore your posts. They hardly pass even as talking points.
No one is disputing that clarkdale's IGP offloads video decoding from the CPU (just like GMA4500 that came before it), but if you would go back and reread your post #29, you will find that you said the clarkdale cpu offloads video from the IGP which is incorrect. You need to watch out for those simple errors especially if you want people to take your wild speculation seriously.
Furthermore, the IGP uses fixed function units to process the video. They are not programmable and they do not run on any software (for instance, you can't accelerate flash with an intel IGP). They do not provide acceleration for anything except the supported video formats. LLano, on the other hand, will accelerate OpenCL and Dx11 in addition to this video. This will be a valuable upper hand over the lifetime of the product.
Read about power gating and how it works. HKMG with power gating is largely the reason behind intel's recent lead in power consumption (although a dual core K10.5 + 790GX consumes the same power as clarkdale). Learned behavior such as faith is what allows you to selectively acknowledge certain information as factual or impossible depending on how it complies with your expectations about the world.
Again DX11 is MS and AMD and NV support it . That doesn't mean intel has to support it in the same manner . Check out gaming bencmarks with Intels clarkdale and note Cpu usage . Than do the same with AMDs solution . You will see Intels Cpu is very active weres as AMDs isn't.
I've had this mixed feeling about the whole Fusion thing as well. I suppose I can't fault AMD's vision and business strategy - it paid goodly amount for ATI - but as others have suggested this can accelerate the console-lization of PC.
What do you mean by the console-lization of PC?
Do you mean competent graphics PC prices dropping to the level of gaming consoles? Or do you mean something else?
How does NVIDIA compete in the GPU market when the GPU becomes a subsection of the CPU? If the CPU/GPU is faster then or reasonably faster then a discrete mid-range GPU, then you'll see much less people buying the discrete solution.You're suggesting if AMD could kill off NVIDIA, that they would then stop selling discrete cards? That makes no sense. Why would AMD not sell a product that people want to buy?
A valid concern might be what happens if AMD becomes a monopoly on the GPU market, but if that happens it would be because NVIDIA can't stay competitive. However, at that point Intel might just buy NVIDIA if their in-house graphics isn't up to snuff.
Sorry, not trolling (at least I don't think I am.). PCI-e is far from the expansion slot for everything, PCI itself is far from dead. As a consumer, over the years the expansion cards that I've purchased have gone down further and further. With this most recent build, the only expansion slot that is filled is the PCI-E x16 slot with a video card. I know there are other expansions, but there really aren't a whole ton of PCI-E slots.Either way, I think you're just trolling for comments. Motherboard manufacturers not including "video card slots"? Do you mean PCI-e? The same slots used for every other type of expansion card? I think some silicon moving around on a motherboard scares you way too much.
As a consumer, over the years the expansion cards that I've purchased have gone down further and further. With this most recent build, the only expansion slot that is filled is the PCI-E x16 slot with a video card. I know there are other expansions, but there really aren't a whole ton of PCI-E slots.
It isn't likely. We already have 3 gb/s transfer capabilities with SATA. I foresee SATA evolving at roughly the same pace as SSD transfer speed (if not faster).Is it possible that External SSD devices may ever need the massive bandwidth provided by PCI-Express?
Furthermore, the IGP uses fixed function units to process the video. They are not programmable and they do not run on any software (for instance, you can't accelerate flash with an intel IGP). They do not provide acceleration for anything except the supported video formats. LLano, on the other hand, will accelerate OpenCL and Dx11 and flash in addition to video. This will be a valuable upper hand over the lifetime of the product.
How does NVIDIA compete in the GPU market when the GPU becomes a subsection of the CPU? If the CPU/GPU is faster then or reasonably faster then a discrete mid-range GPU, then you'll see much less people buying the discrete solution.
Again, this is all speculation. While it may never happen, but I think we should be aware that there is a possibility of it happening.
Yes it is a valid concern.
Sorry, not trolling (at least I don't think I am.). PCI-e is far from the expansion slot for everything, PCI itself is far from dead. As a consumer, over the years the expansion cards that I've purchased have gone down further and further. With this most recent build, the only expansion slot that is filled is the PCI-E x16 slot with a video card. I know there are other expansions, but there really aren't a whole ton of PCI-E slots.
