- Mar 3, 2017
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I wonder how much of this is due to real silicon differences and how much due to BIOS, I think when he tested HX370 he had a lot of issues keeping the Asus he had from throttling, he eventually succeeded but I don't remember if that was thanks to replacing the machine with other Asus model. Anyway what I wonder about is did he had a chance to test other laptop SKUs with HX370, or does he base his investigation on the early samples he had access to.
I asked him about it:I wonder how much of this is due to real silicon differences and how much due to BIOS, I think when he tested HX370 he had a lot of issues keeping the Asus he had from throttling, he eventually succeeded but I don't remember if that was thanks to replacing the machine with other Asus model. Anyway what I wonder about is did he had a chance to test other laptop SKUs with HX370, or does he base his investigation on the early samples he had access to.
It's sad Well, it can't be helped because the packaging is given priority to cDNA GPUs...
Bad bot, that’s out of topicAMD needs to wider. Intel and Apple are already 6 and 8 wide respectively.
* without the 8GB VRAM limit. Minimum system RAM on a Strix Halo will probably be 32GB.thats crazy, RTX 4060 performance on handheld
It’s probably $1800+ and the starting config is 16GBWell, according to a prolific poster here, there's no way that thing can cost anything less than $2000+. They should sell dozens!
You're lucky to find a Strix Halo mini PC for $1500 (granted they usually start at 64GB). Strix Halo ain't cheap.Well, according to a prolific poster here, there's no way that thing can cost anything less than $2000+. They should sell dozens!
Core Zen4: Decode 4-Wide, 4ALU, 4FPAMD needs to wider. Intel and Apple are already 6 and 8 wide respectively.
I never said it was cheap. I am certain that they are pricing a very healthy margin into products with it though. They price it like it's a 9950x combined with a 4060ti marked up by 20%, which is similar to how it performs, but way more than the COGS. I also get that there aren't a lot of them in the market yet, so they are still punishing the wallets of early adopters. It's a great way to demolish word of mouth marketing and enthusiasm for the product.You're lucky to find a Strix Halo mini PC for $1500 (granted they usually start at 64GB). Strix Halo ain't cheap.
Also, for a gaming part, there's no real need for both CCDs to be present.
No, it would be nice to have CCD on both sides.It's not a gaming part. It's being sold as an AI self-hosting solution.
You are lucky, Framework not only has it as one of the first sellers, they even sell it starting from $1099 for the computer or $799 for the contained mini ITX mainboard.You're lucky to find a Strix Halo mini PC for $1500 (granted they usually start at 64GB). Strix Halo ain't cheap.
You're lucky to find a Strix Halo mini PC for $1500 (granted they usually start at 64GB). Strix Halo ain't cheap.
Says you?until AMD failed miserably at getting design wins in the laptop space
Strix Halo could've been sold for free with 10x the supply and adoption wouldn't be 10x of reality, not even remotely close.Most likely, Strix Halo wasn't cheap until AMD failed miserably at getting design wins in the laptop space. If they sell a version with single 8c CCD + full 40CU IOD for like $400 they're probably already getting a markup well over 50% for it.
Or just wait for others in the space to also make 256b SoCs so there is a healthy market to actually build in, which is precisely what N1X is.It wouldn't get them the M4 Max levels of profits they were hoping for, but it's still better than the alternative of letting the chip be forgotten into complete irrelevance IMO.
N1X will release late 2025/early 2026 and Strix Halo will do fine against it.There is no credible market without NV or Intel being in it too, AMD just isn't going to bet big on client anymore all on their own tangent, it is not really what the company is good at. They excel at simply out engineering the competition in established markets. A simple pure mantra, build the best and they will come.
Medusa Halo obliterates N1X into nothingness, that is a pretty simple way to establish the pecking order, after all AMD are actually the early movers this time.
Yes, but we will need to see how many laptop design wins they get.N1X will release late 2025/early 2026 and Strix Halo will do fine against it.
Apple does not compete against Windows PC's, they just don't.Medusa Halo’s competition is M6 Pro/Max at least in the AI space in early 2027.
Would need a very quick turnaround knowing how terribad N1X development has been.Will Nvidia even have N2X ready by then?
In every metric but design wins and market share, yes.AMD will own the 256b Windows space for a long time.
If they sell a version with single 8c CCD + full 40CU IOD for like $400 they're probably already getting a markup well over 50% for it.
Dell, HP and Lenovo are ready for N1X.Yes, but we will need to see how many laptop design wins they get.
No one sane will be doing AI work on a Qualcomm laptop.Glymur is a weird middle ground part, not sure what market it really addresses as the GPU will remain awful vs the comp
Agree but they do compete in the laptop space. And Apple’s laptops do sell well in the $1800+ range.Apple does not compete against Windows PC's, they just don't.
And also not merchant Si, which is kinda the big reason why.
It’s not easy, laptops are very hard. Don’t expect NV to flood the market. These aren’t dGPUs.In every metric but design wins and market share, yes.
NV will be ahead early on through sheer force of entrenched share and lotsa monies, even knowing how ehh WoA is.