I agree. The idea is good. AMD should have done what NVidia does properly : Proper software support. Nvidia has all these ....works solutions to promote the features of their videocards.
That's because they co-market games with developers/publishers which means NV is paying for some of the game's marketing. They also send free programmers on site to help implement these features into the game. The last time NV sighted,
there are more than 300 engineers devoted ONLY to GameWorks.
AMD could never afford such a strategy with HSA in the last 3-4 years and if we go back 6-8 years ago, the management that ran the company wasn't smart enough to bribe developers with co-marketing $ and software engineering resources. So there you go.
Look at the reality -- the key founders of HSA do not include Intel and NV:
That means for any company lacking marketing $$$ and engineering resources, it's going to have to literally make HSA software / programs because 3rd parties sure as hell aren't going to do it given Intel's global market share. You are not going to have a push towards HSA unless all the key parties are on-board OR you throw huge marketing $ behind it and have 300+ software engineers ready to go just for this task.
The interesting part is NV doesn't have an x86 CPU and their ARM Tegra SoCs aren't exactly selling like hot cakes in servers. It will be interesting to see what exactly Rogers will do to benefit the server market as a Server Architect.
"HSA" is nothing more than a pipedream, quite frankly.
No, it's not a pipe dream but it's just
very costly and technically difficult to implement. Even Samsung with tens of billions of dollars in cash still has not managed to implement HSA in their custom ARM processor that could go into the next gen of Galaxy line-up of smartphones, but it doesn't mean it won't happen at some point.
"According to recently released information,
Samsung began to work on its custom general-purpose ARMv8-compatible core in 2011. For about four years now, the company has been hiring microprocessor developers from companies like Advanced Micro Devices. "
http://www.kitguru.net/components/c...sor-core-already-supported-by-software-tools/
We might start to see Samsung implementing HSA gen 1 in M1 starting with Galaxy S7 or it might take another 3-5 years but it's clear that other major players in the world outside of AMD do understand the benefits of HSA in the future. Now unless someone is 80-90 years old on this forum, they might never see the benefits of HSA but for the rest of us, we have decades to see if HSA can actually become reality in smartphones, tablets, laptops, PCs.
Even if AMD never implements HSA successfully, we also have ARM, Samsung, Qualcomm.