cbn
Lifer
No, it's not likely. But we'll have to wait and see how Jaguar does.
Isn't the claim something like 10% better frequency and 15% better IPC?
If so, that would put it on par with an Opteron 165 or 3800 x 2 from the socket 939 days.
No, it's not likely. But we'll have to wait and see how Jaguar does.
Isn't the claim something like 10% better frequency and 15% better IPC?
If so, that would put it on par with an Opteron 165 or 3800 x 2 from the socket 939 days.
Piledriver has already higher IPC/core than an athlon64.
For Steamroller , according to AMD , claim is 30% more operations/clock
for a whole module.
Granted it is in comparison to BD that would still put him at 20% higher
IPC than Piledriver.
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http://techreport.com/review/23485/amd-cto-reveals-first-steamroller-details
Speaking of these little AMD cores, what plans does AMD have for the future after Jaguar? Do they plan on designing a successor or is the plan to move completely to ARM?
Nothing is known past 2013...I think the company is not sure if they will survive 2013. Kaveri/Steamroller was supposed to launch 2013. It's dead now. Regardless of the denial by AMD, thats just PR ****.
The only thing known about 2014 is the ARM x64 SoC, and Volcanic Islands GPU architecture.
Intel will be making 14nm chips in 2014. AMD simply cannot compete. TSMC/GloFlo will be rolling out 20nm in 2014...probably with **** yields, and a lot of f ups.
It makes perfect sense for AMD to quit now and not waste money competing with Intel in x86, where they own 83% of the market....
So, just explain to me how they will keep the 1.3 Billion in revenues after Q3 2013
I dont know 😕
Kaveri was supposed to launch in Q3 2013. Now its not on any recent roadmap.
You have to be realistic. In 2014 Intel will be on 14nm. How can AMD hope to compete? Engineering innovations are incremental. 28nm SteamRoller won't do jacksquat...and there is absolutely NO innovation happening at AMD right now.
The only thing you can be certain of is the ARM server SoC, and the Volcanic Islands architecture. The on-die gfx in APUs is always a generation behind.
Why do they need 1.3 Bn in revenues? Welcome to the new reality. Yea i wanna believe in AMD, but its over dude. AMD is done.
Bulldozer ironically bulldozed this company to the ground.
AMD CANNOT leave the x86 market
To be clear I didn't say or imply they're leaving x86. They're leaving high perf. 'Big Core' should die at AMD.
http://www.techpowerup.com/175751/APUs-Make-Up-Nearly-75-of-AMD-s-Processor-Sales.html
posted by someone earlier today. Big core doesn't earn AMD anything. Of course they should still do R&D work on the architecture side, but get out of the manufacturing business for big core/stand alone desktop x86.
No one wants a 8 core piledriver piece of garbage. I wanna meet all these millions of video encoding PC enthusiasts that have need for heavily multi-threaded compute...and will save AMD...lol.
The software ecosystem doesn't exist for octa core...and I don't give a rats behind if it will in the *future*. Piledriver will be outdated in said *future*.
Tech companies need to have long term strategies, but need to execute and deliver products that consumers need in the present.
I'm no said that. But if you want to understand how HSA works, than Java is the best example now. Of course there are differences. HSA is focusing on speed, but the concept behind it is really Java-like.Not sure I'd ever try to relate something that they're trying to sell based on speed and efficiency with java.... 😉
I think it's a communication problem when peoples think this. HSA don't really have any hardware requirements.Do you have anything to confirm that? My specific understanding is that GCN is an absolute requirement for HSA.
There are extensions for some future hardware. An HSA-aware complier will detect this, and the HSA program will run more optimal in these systems.You need a GPU with the ability to handle pointers, which VLIW4 can't do.
Desktop High-End is not where the large volume is, it was like that all along. I dont see why people believe that Bulldozer/Piledriver is the problem with AMD.
The problem is they haven't took any advantage of their APU to gain market share and increase their revenue. They have a better product than Intel
And the APU gfx is NOT good enough for realistic gaming.
Ahem, BD is not desktop high-end. You cannot compare BD to Socket 2011...
The x86 cores in the APU are crap. So its not an all out "better" product. Intel HD 4000 (IVB) is good enough for web browsing, youtube, 1080p etc.
And the APU gfx is NOT good enough for realistic gaming. The APU either serves a need that doesn't exist, OR its a marketing problem. Either way, its AMDs fault.
So, just explain to me how they will keep the 1.3 Billion in revenues after Q3 2013 with only ARM SoCs for SERVER and ATI Graphics Cards when NVIDIA only now have just passed the 1 Billinion mark in Revenue having 90% of HPC cards, 60% of Discrete Graphics Cards and 3 years in the SoC market with their own SoC design??
AMD CANNOT leave the x86 market because 60-70% of its revenue comes from that as of now.
Why does AMD need to be so large anyway? They can become smaller and more agile. Work on fewer really good products and when they are "stable" as a company, they can begin to grow again.
I thought it was obvious that's what they doing the last year or so.
The problem is they haven't took any advantage of their APU to gain market share and increase their revenue. They have a better product than Intel and they still cant take any advantage out of it. They spend 5bill 5 years ago and they havent flooded the market both in Desktop and Mobile with APUs.
Sorry but 500 from Brazos + 300 from the GPUs = 800, where are they going to find 500 more to get to 1.3B ???
I thought "pulling a Pentium M" meant dropping your current inefficient architecture, going back to what you had before, and die-shrinking it,. In Intel's case, they dropped P4 and went back to PIII. In AMD's case, that would mean dropping Bulldozer and going back to...K10. They already die-shrunk it to 32nm and it seemed to work well, after all.
I think what we are all coming to acknowledge is that The Peter Principle
Dirk was billed as a genius at DEC, I personally wouldn't know if that was true (didn't work with anyone who worked with Dirk when he was at DEC) but he was also billed as a genius at AMD in creating the original Athlon K7 (something I can attest too based on first-person accounts of coworkers at TI who came from AMD).
Sadly it looks like AMD promoted him to the point where he not only was no longer able to utilize his genius, but it was also a liability at that point in the decision chain.