- Mar 27, 2009
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As I see things, two big weaknesses of AM3+ and FM2+ are huge amount of cache for the former and too large of an igpu for the latter.
If AMD can fix both those problems with a new hexcore die I think the cost would be low enough for it to be competitive.
I also think hexcore would be a good sweet spot for AMD (one reason being with six cores the chances for a dual core SKU are extremely low)
The question is what direction do they go?
1.) Do they design the hexcore for both desktop and higher end laptops (using dGPU)? Or do they go strictly for desktop with the hexcore?
2. What uarch do they use? Streamroller (which proven capability for high clocks)? Or do they use Excavator (which might clock lower due to high density libraries, but might be better for notebook using dGPU)?
In any event, I would hope for either no iGPU (integrated graphics on chipset are fine) or a very minimal iGPU (64 GCN stream processors maximum).
If AMD can fix both those problems with a new hexcore die I think the cost would be low enough for it to be competitive.
I also think hexcore would be a good sweet spot for AMD (one reason being with six cores the chances for a dual core SKU are extremely low)
The question is what direction do they go?
1.) Do they design the hexcore for both desktop and higher end laptops (using dGPU)? Or do they go strictly for desktop with the hexcore?
2. What uarch do they use? Streamroller (which proven capability for high clocks)? Or do they use Excavator (which might clock lower due to high density libraries, but might be better for notebook using dGPU)?
In any event, I would hope for either no iGPU (integrated graphics on chipset are fine) or a very minimal iGPU (64 GCN stream processors maximum).
