- Mar 3, 2017
- 1,779
- 6,798
- 136
This has nothing to do with DRAM speeds and everything to do with AMD being cheap and chopping tf outta their SRAM allotments in client.
It's only bad news if it means performance regression.
Chester Lam of Chips and Cheese published two related pieces last month,
Not having the MALL cache would surely cut into performance — of (i)GPU workloads, but secondarily also of CPU workloads while an iGPU workload runs concurrently. The effects cannot be quantified outside of AMD's labs though because 3rd parties apparently don't have access to a simple on-and-off switch for the MALL cache.
How did you even get there.Honestly, @adroc_thurston 's suggestion that RDNA5 GPUs are all going to suck in gaming
It's a much smaller total caching package even for a part with 96 WGPs. Compression also has jack snot to do with it. More esoteric techniques are at play.The RDNA4 -> RDNA5 transition is going to take advantage of GDDR7 which has a 50% boost in bandwidth over GDDR6. On top of that, there's a boost in L2 size, and then there's a new memory compression feature.
They've also liquidated Ryzen Z (the handheld dingus) line.As much as @adroc_thurston likes to pretend AMD is now Nvidia and tells all their clients for gaming chips to ah heck off (because they apparently refused one contract to make a semicustom for Valve under 10 million chips),
lmao dawgAMD wants to maintain a healthy relationship with their clients outside the AI craze, and with good reason.
No MALL cache means Strix Halo would scarcely perform better in games than Strix Point. How that would affect running local AI workloads that can make use of Halos magic bullet (GPUs access to 96 or 128GB of system RAM), I dont know, but I suspect most local AI workloads are not bottlenecked by bandwidth like gaming is, so dropping the MALL may not really affect AMDs envisioned use case for Halo.Chester Lam of Chips and Cheese published two related pieces last month,
Not having the MALL cache would surely cut into performance — of (i)GPU workloads, but secondarily also of CPU workloads while an iGPU workload runs concurrently. The effects cannot be quantified outside of AMD's labs though because 3rd parties apparently don't have access to a simple on-and-off switch for the MALL cache.
Dawg it has 2x the offchip membw.No MALL cache means Strix Halo would scarcely perform better in games than Strix Point.
Its still only ~70% of what you get with GDDR7 with only half the bus width. Take away the MALL and gaming is going to take a crap.Dawg it has 2x the offchip membw.
AMD ships like 18 or 20Gbps GDDR6 so the b/w delta would've been relatively tiny.Its still only ~70% of what you get with GDDR7 with only half the bus width
No, you're just gonna make it less efficient.Take away the MALL and gaming is going to take a crap.
Gorgon is just the classic rebrand with 0.1ghz increase lol
Wait, what? Is Z2E the last one we'll see?They've also liquidated Ryzen Z (the handheld dingus) line.
To that end, only a retard with more money than sense would ever buy a Halo system for gaming anyway, when you could easily build an entire upgradable PC for less money than the cheapest Halo prebuilt costs, so its a moot point anyway.
Wait, what? Is Z2E the last one we'll see?
IMO, Steam will likely be looking at one of the Zen 7 configurations with RDNA5 for their next MiniPC.
QualcommIMO, Steam will likely be looking at one of the Zen 7 configurations with RDNA5 for their next MiniPC.
Doesn’t MLID believe it will be AMD again?Qualcomm
I'd hate to think what a Zen 7 Halo SM would cost, if people are freaking out over the current specs price.
Qualcomm
Is the price of the SteamMachine known? I haven't seen it mentioned.
No but based upon Linus' comments, $600-$800.
Halo would easily be over a grand.
It's N3p.Even the PS6 is probably going to be $700, and that's with a die that's likely much smaller than Strix Halo.
A hacked 6+32 part with 32G L5x could've sold below that easily.Halo would easily be over a grand.
I think there could be a market for MiniPCs for gaming.
I am not the only one who thinks that. Valve / Steam also think that.
Not everyone wants to build their own DIY PCs and some people don't realize that they can go to a place like MicroCenter and MicroCenter can assemble a PC for them from their desired components.
IMO, Steam will likely be looking at one of the Zen 7 configurations with RDNA5 for their next MiniPC.


