Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
I would very much be interested in a link to PH3 desktop = Bulldozer. Its is a feb. 09 release is it not?
Originally posted by: Martimus
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
I would very much be interested in a link to PH3 desktop = Bulldozer. Its is a feb. 09 release is it not?
What is PH3? The Phenom 2's with DDR3 support have a release date in February. IDontCare was saying that if there is going to be a Phenom 3, it would likely be the Bulldozer architecture in 2011.
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
As for the IT industry. Cost =productivity. Time saved= dollars spent on. If you consider a 2p intel ic7 will equal a pH2 4p system the cost savings can be staggering. I like your argument. But sound business deceasions are not gradual upgrades. Lets see when we see the IC7 2p servers . I will bet its alot sooner than your saying alot sooner try Jan.
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
As for the IT industry. Cost =productivity. Time saved= dollars spent on. If you consider a 2p intel ic7 will equal a pH2 4p system the cost savings can be staggering. I like your argument. But sound business deceasions are not gradual upgrades. Lets see when we see the IC7 2p servers . I will bet its alot sooner than your saying alot sooner try Jan.
Do you have any actual data to support that conclusion, or are you just talking out your ass becauase you like the Core i7.
Because IDC posted some very interesting multiprocessor scaling benchmarks, and the Core i7, frankly, sucks at MP.
IDC, correct me if I have the wrong impression of your results.
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
As for the IT industry. Cost =productivity. Time saved= dollars spent on. If you consider a 2p intel ic7 will equal a pH2 4p system the cost savings can be staggering. I like your argument. But sound business deceasions are not gradual upgrades. Lets see when we see the IC7 2p servers . I will bet its alot sooner than your saying alot sooner try Jan.
Do you have any actual data to support that conclusion, or are you just talking out your ass becauase you like the Core i7.
Because IDC posted some very interesting multiprocessor scaling benchmarks, and the Core i7, frankly, sucks at MP.
IDC, correct me if I have the wrong impression of your results.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
while you guys are arguing, Im hearing 32nm intel samples are starting to distribute.
Originally posted by: Phynaz
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
As for the IT industry. Cost =productivity. Time saved= dollars spent on. If you consider a 2p intel ic7 will equal a pH2 4p system the cost savings can be staggering. I like your argument. But sound business deceasions are not gradual upgrades. Lets see when we see the IC7 2p servers . I will bet its alot sooner than your saying alot sooner try Jan.
Do you have any actual data to support that conclusion, or are you just talking out your ass becauase you like the Core i7.
Because IDC posted some very interesting multiprocessor scaling benchmarks, and the Core i7, frankly, sucks at MP.
IDC, correct me if I have the wrong impression of your results.
There are no publically available MP i7 numbers.
But trust me, i7 MP is a game changer, and not for Just Intel and AMD.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
They can't be poulson already, can they?
Originally posted by: JackyP
Am I the only one who read the techreport review of shanghai? On workstation and desktop apps deneb will be comparable to penryn, but at least slightly slower, at a higher die-size (which is a GREAT improvement over barcelona anyway). It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems and harpers will still compete well in int workloads AFAIK. So anything they make up on desktops they will lose in server sales in 2009. I don't even know if they have a good laptop platform in the works?
Additionally the outlook for the market as a whole looks very bleak. Surprsingly their loss for Q4 seems to be even bigger than Intel's, even though one would expect people to buy cheaper hardware during those times and thus have preferred AMD's "value offerings"
Being realistic it doesn't look very rosy.
The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
Originally posted by: dmens
The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
oh rly? whose word is that?
Originally posted by: dmens
The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
oh rly? whose word is that?
It is not assumption. It is fact, it's the same architecture, only bandwidth numbers and some uncore clocks will change from Shanghai -> Deneb. Rumour has it that uncore will be clocked lower btw.Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: JackyP
Am I the only one who read the techreport review of shanghai? On workstation and desktop apps deneb will be comparable to penryn, but at least slightly slower, at a higher die-size (which is a GREAT improvement over barcelona anyway). It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems and harpers will still compete well in int workloads AFAIK. So anything they make up on desktops they will lose in server sales in 2009. I don't even know if they have a good laptop platform in the works?
Additionally the outlook for the market as a whole looks very bleak. Surprsingly their loss for Q4 seems to be even bigger than Intel's, even though one would expect people to buy cheaper hardware during those times and thus have preferred AMD's "value offerings"
Being realistic it doesn't look very rosy.
Take this one at a time...
"On workstation and desktop apps deneb will be comparable to penryn" - you are making the assumption that Deneb vs Shanghai perform the same on desktop apps.
Regardless, the Techreport review didn't do the usual desktop benchmarks...they rightly focused more on server and workstation benchmarks.
In addition, they didn't do the benchmark series that Shanghai has been designed to focus on (because of the high demand)...namely VM benches. They stayed mainly with Nehalem's strength which is rendering and encoding.
It's just a guessing game whose costs per die will be bigger. They are more or less the same size. Some of the differences include (EDIT: list updated to reflect some more ideas):"It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems" - since Nehalems will be the same size, what makes you think they will be cheaper?? I would bet that the opposite is true...
Also (as I said above), it depends on what you're doing with the server. The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
I've already considered this in one of my posts and am well aware of the fact that Intel could lower their expectations once again."their loss for Q4 seems to be even bigger than Intel's" - Don't think so...Again, you need to look at the 2 warnings in perspective. Intel made their warning in Oct, and AMD in Dec. Since Intel's estimate is so old, it's accuracy is quite doubtful considering what's been happening to the economy.
Originally posted by: JackyP
It is not assumption. It is fact, it's the same architecture, only bandwidth numbers and some uncore clocks will change from Shanghai -> Deneb. Rumour has it that uncore will be clocked lower btw.Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: JackyP
Am I the only one who read the techreport review of shanghai? On workstation and desktop apps deneb will be comparable to penryn, but at least slightly slower, at a higher die-size (which is a GREAT improvement over barcelona anyway). It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems and harpers will still compete well in int workloads AFAIK. So anything they make up on desktops they will lose in server sales in 2009. I don't even know if they have a good laptop platform in the works?
Additionally the outlook for the market as a whole looks very bleak. Surprsingly their loss for Q4 seems to be even bigger than Intel's, even though one would expect people to buy cheaper hardware during those times and thus have preferred AMD's "value offerings"
Being realistic it doesn't look very rosy.
Take this one at a time...
"On workstation and desktop apps deneb will be comparable to penryn" - you are making the assumption that Deneb vs Shanghai perform the same on desktop apps.
Regardless, the Techreport review didn't do the usual desktop benchmarks...they rightly focused more on server and workstation benchmarks.
In addition, they didn't do the benchmark series that Shanghai has been designed to focus on (because of the high demand)...namely VM benches. They stayed mainly with Nehalem's strength which is rendering and encoding.
Techreport used some benchmarks that will make their way into desktop testing and I've seen lots of unofficial benchmarks (leaks, previews, reviews, etc) each and every one hinted in the same direction.
Then there is common sense, no one manages huge gains with a modified die shrink. Don't expect miracles.
It's just a guessing game whose costs per die will be bigger. They are more or less the same size. Some of the differences include:"It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems" - since Nehalems will be the same size, what makes you think they will be cheaper?? I would bet that the opposite is true...
Also (as I said above), it depends on what you're doing with the server. The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
Nehalem: More logic (-), mature process (+)
Deneb: process (-), immersion expensive AFAIK (-), less logic (+), tricores possible (+)
Going by the official SPEC numbers and official techreport review we can be sure that Nehalem will be up to 50% faster in certain applications, I just extrapolated what this could mean. I don't believe similar performing Nehalems will be more expensive than Shanghai, at least as a new platform, upgrades are a different ballgame.
And if Idontcare is right and upgrades become more important throughout 2009, this could help AMD.
Regarding virtualisation, we only know that Shanghai performs great, but we don't have any numbers from Intel. IIRC nehalem also sports some virtualisation improvements.
I've already considered this in one of my posts and am well aware of the fact that Intel could lower their expectations once again."their loss for Q4 seems to be even bigger than Intel's" - Don't think so...Again, you need to look at the 2 warnings in perspective. Intel made their warning in Oct, and AMD in Dec. Since Intel's estimate is so old, it's accuracy is quite doubtful considering what's been happening to the economy.
On the other hand AMD sells a lot of high-end graphics cards which only recently started to be profitable, so I think it is to be expected that they'd lose more than Intel.
Originally posted by: JackyP
It's just a guessing game whose costs per die will be bigger. They are more or less the same size. Some of the differences include:Originally posted by: Viditor
"It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems" - since Nehalems will be the same size, what makes you think they will be cheaper?? I would bet that the opposite is true...
Also (as I said above), it depends on what you're doing with the server. The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
Nehalem: More logic (-), mature process (+)
Deneb: process (-), immersion expensive AFAIK (-), less logic (+), tricores possible (+)
Originally posted by: Martimus
Originally posted by: JackyP
It's just a guessing game whose costs per die will be bigger. They are more or less the same size. Some of the differences include:Originally posted by: Viditor
"It will get crushed on server workloads by much cheaper nehalems" - since Nehalems will be the same size, what makes you think they will be cheaper?? I would bet that the opposite is true...
Also (as I said above), it depends on what you're doing with the server. The word is that the Opterons will be significantly better for servers running Virtual Machines, which is a very large portion of today's needs.
Nehalem: More logic (-), mature process (+)
Deneb: process (-), immersion expensive AFAIK (-), less logic (+), tricores possible (+)
[/quote][/quote]The Nehalem core sise is 24.4mm^2, while Shanghai is only 15.3mm^2 link, so the Shanghai yeild should be greater (errors in cache are less likely to prduce a "bad" chip). Plus AMD's manufacturing costs should be much lower than Intel's, because they are using Immersion Lithography, and Intel is using twice as many passes. So Shanghai would be cheaper to produce than Nehalem in every way that I can see (Higher yield, cheaper manufacturing process.) I really don't see where you are getting that Nehalem is cheaper to produce.
Originally posted by: Viditor
It's the same core architecture, but not the same chip design...(less logic circuitry, different cache, no RVI, etc... on Deneb).
Originally posted by: Viditor
BTW, Nehalem isn't a mature process at all! Whenever you have a radically new design (like Nehalem), the chances for error increase dramatically.
Originally posted by: Viditor
Thanks Martimus...I knew in the back of my mind that Shanghai was going to be cheaper, but I had forgotten about the double passes on Nehalem. Shanghai should be significantly cheaper to produce...
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: Viditor
It's the same core architecture, but not the same chip design...(less logic circuitry, different cache, no RVI, etc... on Deneb).
Are you proposing Deneb is a different die than Shanghai? AMD actually runs two mask sets to produce these otherwise remarkebly similiar chips?
I always assumed it was one chip (one mask set) with features fused off at packaging to determine the ultimate SKU based on market demand and parametric yields for the varying features.
Originally posted by: Viditor
BTW, Nehalem isn't a mature process at all! Whenever you have a radically new design (like Nehalem), the chances for error increase dramatically.
You are talking about architecture design while jackyp is talking process technology.
Nehalem is introduced on an existing mature 45nm process tech. Shanghai is not.
Nehalem is a new architecture, Shanghai is not considered to be a new architecture in the traditional sense that this phrase is meant to convey.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Guys easy on the waaaay oversimplification of cost structure here.
If AMD had Intel's volume scale to assist in reducing manufacturing costs then we'd be a skosh closer to being able to compare line-item process technology items in a pro vs. con fashion.
As it stands now we can't in good faith (or intelligence) argue that even Intel would have cheaper 45nm parts were they to implement immersion litho to replace their existing (and cost/performance optimized) double-pattern process.
We have no way of knowing how optimized and low-cost Intel's double-pattern is relative to the higher equipment cost approach of implementing immersion litho. Conversely we have no way of knowing just how efficiently AMD is implementing their immersion litho.
Both sides are going to do their best to give you (the potential shareholder) the impression that they have a management team delivering superior decisions relative to the competition.
Originally posted by: Viditor
I was pointing out (obtusely, of course) that while Intel has been using 45nm for awhile now, it doesn't mean they will garner mature yields on a radicall new architectual design.
Originally posted by: Viditor
I can't imagine that they spent all that money on new equipment if they could be anywhere close to as efficient using double patterning...
