You are now the 3rd poster in this thread for whom the architectural comparisons of 285 vs. 7970 flew well over your head when the discussion had 0 to do with 285's perf/watt vs 7970 or their respective average performance standing.
As I said to others who clearly missed the whole point of Tonga
vs. 280x/290x comparison that you take some time to carefully read the last 3 pages of this thread to actually understand what's being discussed. You should actually read what's stated and not assume things and ideas that aren't even being debated.
He was 100% incorrect since his posts couldn't at all comprehend how AMD could improve with R9 300 series on the same node. He doesn't even acknowledge real architectural advancements in Hawaii's memory controller or Tonga's tessellation, colour/memory compression. His rebuttal of linking 285's perf/watt is a waste of time because 285 is not a fully unlocked product and because 390X will have a completely different memory controller and memory type. Basically he wasted space by posting 285's perf/watt as some "proof" that AMD cannot improve perf/watt with 390 cards by resting his argument on the point that 285 couldn't improve upon 7970. What happens when AMD takes all the architectural advancements in Tonga, add far more efficient HBM on a bandwidth/mm2 and watt basis and incorporates other changes they didn't have time to add to Tonga? Do you honestly believe 390X won't have superior perf/watt to a 290X? Since 290X uses about 270W, this is a done deal unless you think 390X will only be 11% faster?
The thing with that poster is that he never posted even 1 positive thing about any AMD products since he joined. Most people who followed his posts for the last 2.5 years pretty much know he will post nothing positive regarding anything AMD. In every thread on AMD he posts negativity.
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I am interested in seeing how AMD will address the active DP transistors for gaming. NV has solved this issue but it seems this has burdened Hawaii and Tahiti significantly. If AMD manages to improve finer voltage granularity and keep those DP units idle in games, even with no changes to the actual architecture they will already achieve a good increase in perf/watt.
You changed your post, guess that one way to win. :thumbsdown:
Anyway, I am not in disagreement when you say AMD can improve their architecture. I also can see there are improvements in tonga but i dont support cherry picking no matter how much you justify it. You also changed your post so I guess its kind of pointless for me to even respond now.
If we want to talk about architectures and improvements, we have to see what they mean in the real world. A synthetic or a random case here or there does isn't enough. Others have tried to say this but then they too get attacked, "you just don't understand" or " you fail to comprehend the word has been spoken"
If you want to talk about an architecture, than do it right.
I think AMD set out to improve with tonga but the results are a mixed bag for sure. But most importantly, if we talk about why tonga was brought up then we are talking about efficiency. So, back on that topic....
I wasn't impressed at all with the real world results of tonga when it comes to efficiency, especially when you look at how hard it was being pushed. Efficiency was the center of its marketing.
When it comes to tonga efficiency, I was mostly disappointed. I have seen plenty of data showing tonga to be less efficient than Tahiti. Sometimes its on par but to say its this huge improvement was a complete lie. But it was being passed of as such.
When we look at new architectures, it takes more than one game or one case to fully appreciate it. That's the only way to really have a worthy discussion.
Tonga was a let down to me. Its not only that, all this memory compression and improvements made to help out the chip with limited bandwidth......
I have to ask how those improvements really matter much to a chip that will be using HBM stacked memory. Bandwidth is not gonna be an issue for Fiji. This doesn't mean I don't think its important for AMD to work on that stuff, cause it really is especially for their lower skus, dgpus, and such.. I am just saying its not something that matters to Fiji, I really don't think like e thought of using tonga to pump up Fiji.. I just don't think it does and there are far better chips accomplishments we can talk about.
Hawaii was a great chip. It really was a great accomplishment of engineering. One that everyone should have been proud of. But AMD sabotaged it right out of the gate. A massive misstep that I still have a hard time understanding. Just a few post ago someone was claiming that pro nvidia people point to Hawaii reference to dog on it, but this was AMDs blunder. All the way! Its not so much that they released such a terrible reference cooled design, its the fact that there was no other option for so so long. This really hurt the image of an otherwise very impressive product.
So when we look back, I think Hawaii or Tahiti is much more worth talking about than tonga. The 5870 is another really great accomplishment. But it is not so much the cards, they are important but its how you play them. AMD is fully capable of designing great architectures and they have proven this time and time again. But what they can't afford is any missteps. Not at this point. The stakes are very very high.
So, there is more to this discussion when we talk a out Fiji. We have seen that great chips aren't enough. Just as important is how AMD plays their hand. This is where we should all be concerned...
At least, that is what I think.
AMD needs to really sit down and have a huge discussion. Their engineers can make great chips, we just need AMD to be firing on all cylinders this next round