RussianSensation
Elite Member
- Sep 5, 2003
- 19,458
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I have no problem with AMD's dgpus. In fact, I am running an AMD dgpu now. It is their cpu/APU lineup that has no appeal at all to me. AMD had better get on board with efficiency in dgpus though, or they are going to have it come back to bite them just like it has in the cpu space already. If the 300 lineup is one super high power expensive HBM flagship and the rest is a bunch of rebrands (for the second time), they are in serious trouble in the dgpu market as well. As for the "next chip syndrome", we have been hearing for years from AMD and now from Intel how great the next generations of igps will be, and how HSA will dominate, but we still are far from a powerful solution that rivals even low end cards like HD7750 in desktop and GT 730 or so in mobile, and HSA is still a very niche market at best.
Gotcha. You are right and I agree with you that their APUs have been way underperforming on the CPU/GPU side and too expensive. However, I think with access to 14nm node + new CPU architecture with Zen and HBM 1/2, it's possible there will be a huge revolution in AMD's APU performance. Right now AMD is stuck between a rock and a hard place:
1) Their partner's node manufacturing is way behind Intel's. That means even if AMD's CPU was exactly as efficient in IPC and as fast as Intel's chips, they would always lose in perf/watt simply because of the node.
2) AMD can't really increase GPU speed 100-200% because DDR3 and even DDR4 is way too slow. These memory technologies aren't good enough for R9 280X/290 level of APU graphics. For that reason, HBM/HBC is required.
The current GCN and CPU architectures in their APUs are outdated. On the dGPU side, AMD can use AIO CLC and enlarge the die size to get improvements in performance. For APUs, there isn't enough memory bandwidth so it would be pointless right now. AMD basically mistimed the ATI acquisition about 10 years too early. The right time to go after high-performance APUs is when HBM provides 500GB/sec+ of memory bandwidth.
We know that the lower node and advancements in GCN/post-GCN will take care of the GPU side and power usage of their APUs. The big unknown is just how good Zen CPU architecture is vs. Skylake. The gap in IPC on a per core basis compared to Haswell today is mind-boggling. The other major challenge for AMD will be pricing. If they start going with HBM and large sized APUs, I think APUs at $149-179 will be wishful thinking unless we are talking about low end performance parts.
