- Sep 16, 2007
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Since the Phenom II was released AMD's sales are doing better, but the problem is that they are not making much money from selling their CPUs and also their GPUs for that matter.
AMD has to compete with Intel at the top end if they want to start making money, like they did in the Athlon 64 days. It seems now that Intel is into overdrive and AMD will have a very hard time catching up. In terms of process technology I think AMD can slowly catch up to Intel, to say being only 6 to 9 months behind Intel. I think that's what will happen for the 32nm process generation.
All hopes for AMD are on Bulldozer which I'm guessing won't be released until late 2010 or early 2011. It's a completely new architecture which is a good thing, because AMD finally moves away from the K6/K7/K8/K10/K10.5 which were great but have become a little too old for the tooth. Now if we look at the current Phenom II, while great for the price, it's still maybe 10% slower clock for clock compared to Core 2. If we look at Nehalem it?s about 15-20% faster than Phenom II at the same clock speed. This is without even counting gains from Hyper threading.
Westmere is basically Nehalem on the newer 32nm process, which can mean higher clocks and lower power draw. And by the time Bulldozer is released it will have to compete not only with Westmere but also Sandy Bridge which should be released around the same time as Bulldozer (late 2010/early 2011).
If we assume only an incremental improvement from Westmere to Sandy Bridge, similar to the difference between Core 2 and Nehalem, then we can say it will be about 10% faster than Westmere. For Bulldozer to compete with that it will have to be about 30% faster than the current Phenom II, which is very hard to get out of the x86 architecture at this time.
Even that jump in performance will not be enough, and Bulldozer will need speeds of at least 3.6GHz and higher. Plus the Hyper threading issue, which will become more important as software becomes more threaded. AMD will not be able to compete against Intel CPUs in the future in highly threaded programs, and adding more cores helps but is not an efficient way to fight Intel's HT. Future AMD CPUs will need to have some form of Hyper threading in order to compete.
So to summerize, AMD can have a chance with Bulldozer if:
Clock per clock performance is at least 25-30% faster than Phenom II
Having at least 8 cores running at a minimum of 3.6GHz
They add Hyper threading
Is this possbile for AMD to do?
AMD has to compete with Intel at the top end if they want to start making money, like they did in the Athlon 64 days. It seems now that Intel is into overdrive and AMD will have a very hard time catching up. In terms of process technology I think AMD can slowly catch up to Intel, to say being only 6 to 9 months behind Intel. I think that's what will happen for the 32nm process generation.
All hopes for AMD are on Bulldozer which I'm guessing won't be released until late 2010 or early 2011. It's a completely new architecture which is a good thing, because AMD finally moves away from the K6/K7/K8/K10/K10.5 which were great but have become a little too old for the tooth. Now if we look at the current Phenom II, while great for the price, it's still maybe 10% slower clock for clock compared to Core 2. If we look at Nehalem it?s about 15-20% faster than Phenom II at the same clock speed. This is without even counting gains from Hyper threading.
Westmere is basically Nehalem on the newer 32nm process, which can mean higher clocks and lower power draw. And by the time Bulldozer is released it will have to compete not only with Westmere but also Sandy Bridge which should be released around the same time as Bulldozer (late 2010/early 2011).
If we assume only an incremental improvement from Westmere to Sandy Bridge, similar to the difference between Core 2 and Nehalem, then we can say it will be about 10% faster than Westmere. For Bulldozer to compete with that it will have to be about 30% faster than the current Phenom II, which is very hard to get out of the x86 architecture at this time.
Even that jump in performance will not be enough, and Bulldozer will need speeds of at least 3.6GHz and higher. Plus the Hyper threading issue, which will become more important as software becomes more threaded. AMD will not be able to compete against Intel CPUs in the future in highly threaded programs, and adding more cores helps but is not an efficient way to fight Intel's HT. Future AMD CPUs will need to have some form of Hyper threading in order to compete.
So to summerize, AMD can have a chance with Bulldozer if:
Clock per clock performance is at least 25-30% faster than Phenom II
Having at least 8 cores running at a minimum of 3.6GHz
They add Hyper threading
Is this possbile for AMD to do?