I don't have them yet. I'll get back to you on that. I think David is wrong in his assumption though, I'm sure the CPUs are hitting the 650mV range at the low end. The GPU on the unit I played with at MWC had this voltage curve;
MHz mV
772 825
700 787
600 743
544 706
420 668
350 662
266 656
According to a new report Samsung is going to introduce the UHD display with the Galaxy Note 5 which will arrive later this year, in the fall to be precise. Production of the UHD panels is expected to start by August which would make sense as Galaxy Note handsets are traditionally unveiled at IFA in September. Galaxy Note 5 is said to have a 5.89-inch display with 748 pixels per inch. Apparently a dual edge variant will be offered as well, it’s 5.78-inch curved display will tout a record high 762 ppi. Keep in mind that these are unofficial claims and should be taken with a grain of salt for now.
I wonder at what point they get so dense they'll turn into a black hole?
I wonder at what point they get so dense they'll turn into a black hole?
VR needs like 1500ppi to be viable. The GearVR with Note 4 was a pixelated mess.This only makes sense for VR.
A phone is not a VR device. VR is a rarely used application that doesn't justify all the wasted pixels and energy.VR needs like 1500ppi to be viable. The GearVR with Note 4 was a pixelated mess.
A phone is not a VR device. VR is a rarely used application that doesn't justify all the wasted pixels and energy.
From the active matrix's view yes it consumes less, but I don't know what behaviour the emission layer has and how it scales with area.@Andrei
Do you have any data that suggests that an AMOLED display with 1 pixel the size of x^2 consumes less then a display with 2 pixels the size of x^2?
Median bin A57 is from 700mV (800MHz) to 1062mV (2100). Best bin is 625 to 987mV.Thanks, very enlightening. I'm sure you already saw the thread then, including the reply where I cited your response.
I still think it's a bit misleading to compare desktop silicon with mobile silicon, there's much more restriction in terms of possible voltage in mobile due to the sheer wide ranging environmental factors. A phone SoC needs to work down to -20C or so. I see that Samsung's earlier voltage tables went down a good 100mV less than what the device is running on release. It went down to 550mV!Thanks, I updated on RWT too. We'll see if anyone responds this time.
Highest little core freq should have less performance than smallest big core freq.Is there an optimal distance between the frequencies of little cores and big cores in a big.LITTLE configuration? Or is it strictly governed by power/thermals?
Cortex-A72 Geekbench result in from Mediatek's MT8173
ST: 1559
MT: 3216
Judging from the scores, it looks like a 2+2 configuration! (it is identified a quad-core by Geekbench)
http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench3/2282514
I am guessing it is manufactured on TSMC's 28nm or 20nm. 28nm is more likely, and definitely not 14/16nm. Its clock frequency is unknown, but it is presumably similar to A57's and my educated guess puts it around 2.0 GHz. Geekbench reads A53s running @1.4 GHz.
v. A57 (Exynos 5433, 20nm) <- A57 here is running 32-bit
v. A57 (Exynos 7420, 14nm)
v. A8 (Apple A8, 20nm)
It looks promising for med-to-high end phones until Qualcomm gets its act together. Per-clock performance is still not at Cyclone level, but given the design philosophy and die size differences, it comes surprisingly close. A bulk of the gains in comparison to A57 comes from FP and memory performance. It looks like a more complete and refined A57. It will be interesting to see whether Samsung will follow the suit with its version of A72 or go custom route in the future.
Split loyalties: Apple may pull back from Samsung chip deal due to low yields
GloFo apparently has 30% yields.
GF's yield issues stem from the fact they refuse to do a copy-exact port of Samsung's 14nm. They are trying to bring it in and ramp it up on the cheap. Converting as much of it as they can to run on existing and antiquated 32nm equipment and chemicals.
Of course it can be done, but it comes at the expense of time (your fab engineer's time) and lower yield ramp rate (including the possibility of being capped at a lower yield limit).
On the flip-side, the industry doesn't need yet-another-higher-cost-node right now. It needs a foundry that can figure out how to deliver lower cost/xtor on these advanced nodes.
The deal is unprecedented in modern foundry history, with GF essentially acknowledging the two companies will use a “copy-smart” approach that involves synchronizing materials, process recipes, and tools.
We previously mentioned that Samsung’s 14nm process in general will lack any significant die shrink due to almost unchanged metal interconnect pitch, but this assumption was in comparison to their 20nm LPM process from which the 14nm LPE process borrows its BEOL (back end of line) from. Opposite to what we thought, the Exynos 5433 was manufacturered on a 20LPE process which makes use of a quite larger metal layer. The result is that one can see a significant die shrink for the 7420 as it is, according to Chipworks, only 78mm² and a 44% reduction over the Exynos 5433's 113mm². This is considerable even when factoring in that the new SoC had two added GPU shader cores.
As one can see in the table, we can achieve well up to -250mV voltage drop on some frequencies on the A57s and the GPU. As a reminder, power scales quadratically with voltage, so a drop from 1287.50mV to 1056.25mV as seen in the worst bin 1.9GHz A57 frequency should for example result in a considerable 33% drop in dynamic power. The Exynos 7420 uses this headroom to go slightly higher in clocks compared to the 5433 - but we expect the end power to still be quite lower than what we've seen on the Note 4.
This new GPU is clocked a bit higher as well, at 772 MHz compared to the 700 MHz of the GPU in the Exynos 5433. We see the same two-stage maximum frequency scaling mechanism as discovered in our Note 4 Exynos review, with less ALU biased loads being limited to 700MHz as opposed to the 5433's 600MHz. There's also a suspicion that Samsung was ready to go higher to compete with other vendors though, as we can see evidence of an 852 MHz clock state that is unused. Unfortunately deeply testing this SoC isn’t possible at this time as doing so would require disassembling the phone.
That's unexpected, especially since GloFo/Samsung implied that they were "copying exact" in the presentation materials they gave when this deal was announced!
http://www.extremetech.com/computin...uddy-up-for-14nm-while-ibm-heads-for-the-exit