hope that mods approve this thread?
Bulldozer samples in 2010:
presentation from Chekib Akrout, General Manager, Technology Group could be very interesting: http://phx.corporate-ir.net/External...xUeXBlPTM=&t=1
hope that mods approve this thread?
Bulldozer samples in 2010:
presentation from Chekib Akrout, General Manager, Technology Group could be very interesting: http://phx.corporate-ir.net/External...xUeXBlPTM=&t=1
Last edited by Nedjo; 11-11-2009 at 04:19 PM.
Adobe is working on Flash Player support for 64-bit platforms as part of our ongoing commitment to the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player. We expect to provide native support for 64-bit platforms in an upcoming release of Flash Player following the release of Flash Player 10.1.
So, Bobcat is for taking on Atom and such?
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Yeah, its a low-pwer CPU design. And it looks very promising!
Yes ,it is very low power but keeping the mainstream performance of today's CPUs. They mentioned sub 1W power draw(idle i suppose),and pretty high OoO performance(citing "90% of today's mainstream performance levels" probably meaning athlon II),so Atom will be fighting a much faster per clock and per Watt cores,but also Atom will evolve by the time ontario cores launch.
Q&A: SOI 32nm for GPU is not "a big issue" and doesn't require major redesign for Llano production. 32nm Llano comes first.BD and Bobcat are same underlying design but developed by 2 separate teams. Bobcat uses one of the BD cores(modules) and is optimized for low power and APU integration.
edit: APU products will be refined on year basis-a bit on CPU and/or GPU side,but the new Fusion design will have a more aggressive roadmap compared to previous CPU roadmaps.
Last edited by informal; 11-11-2009 at 12:01 PM.
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wow. lol looks like AMD have been busy little beavers behind the scene.![]()
it would be overoptimistic trying to fit x86 power needs in head-2-head fight with ARM... Intel can't do that with In-order Atom, so I don't see how can it be achieved with OoO CPU... and I'm not talking about idle power...
ARM with GloFo's low power 28nm tech will be unchallengeable when it comes to power, and vastness of ARM market can cover more expensive specialized production technology.
Adobe is working on Flash Player support for 64-bit platforms as part of our ongoing commitment to the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player. We expect to provide native support for 64-bit platforms in an upcoming release of Flash Player following the release of Flash Player 10.1.
Is this what he said to the question somebody asked about what has been taped out? My psis poor sattelite internet (xplornet) couldn't keep up to the stream set to 50k.
[edit]
Also, about the cores. So each core in the new architecture is called a "Bulldozer" core, while products such as Zambezi will be cpu's made up of individual "Bulldozer" cores? That's the way i'm reading it. And "Bobcat" is a completely different core than "Bulldozer", is that correct?
Last edited by flippin_waffles; 11-11-2009 at 12:20 PM.
I noticed that they mentioned Bobcat and BD are designed for the around the same ISA... yet the Bobcat slide only mentions SSE1-3, when Bulldozer should be SSE1-4+... So that can't be an absolute statement, as I wouldn't imagine them trying to include all of the latest extensions in Bobcat, to keep core size/power down.
Did they specifically say that Bobcat shares any pieces with BD? They said the whole two separate teams with different design points, but I don't remember them saying anything about how much implementation they shared.
Since one of Bobcat's design points is being synthesize-able, I wonder how much they're positioning it to compete with Intel's Atom. I assume AMD won't be able to license out the cores (for SoCs) to other companies like Intel will be doing at TSMC :X
No, someone asked specifically about the fact that the Fusion chips will be the first time a GPU has been on SOI and if there are any challenges I believe. They dodged the question about what has been taped out (as they don't release internal milestones) and just pretty much said things are on track for the schedule they've announced.
Adobe is working on Flash Player support for 64-bit platforms as part of our ongoing commitment to the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player. We expect to provide native support for 64-bit platforms in an upcoming release of Flash Player following the release of Flash Player 10.1.
coming years look exciting.. i guess i cannot not stop buying hehe
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When AMD had 64-bit and Intel had only 32-bit, they tried to tell the world there was no need for 64-bit. Until they got 64-bit.
When AMD had IMC and Intel had FSB, they told the world "there is plenty of life left in the FSB" (actual quote, and yes, they had *math* to show it had more bandwidth). Until they got an IMC.
When AMD had dual core and Intel had single core, they told the world that consumers don't need multi core. Until they got dual core.
When intel was using MCM, they said it was a better solution than native dies. Until they got native dies. (To be fair, we knocked *unconnected* MCM, and still do, we never knocked MCM as a technology, so hold your flames.)by John Fruehe
Well, ARM is even getting into OoO designs now, so it's not just straight power consumption, but the computing power available in a power envelope and core area, since we're heading into more and more integration. With a Fusion concept AMD might have a chance, seeing as that's what ARM offerings have right now, ie. a SoC with a cpu core plus some other accelerators (eg. Nvidia's Tegra or TI's OMAPs). However that'd require a lot of effort to pursue on AMD's part, which I would question them having the resources for at the current time.
That's not product improvement, it's some unspecified measure of transistor improvement. Probably related to power/leakage as well, since that would provide the larger number to brag about, and they are finally using metal gates at this node, which helps a lot with leakage.
very interesting was talking about Fusion
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Per Anand, all the Llano APU ("fusion") stuff in 2011 has Phenom II-based CPU cores.
So, while they will likely have a stronger GPU side, the CPU side will be about 2 generations behind Intel's Sandybridge/Ivybridge.
Bulldozer is high-end desktop and server only (at least in 2011).
don't want to go in to your need to state obvious...
of course it's a measure of transistor improvement! Better transistors -> better CPUs! Yeah?
there are bunch of possible parameters that could be related, but regardless it's good to hear that GloFo has mastered HKMG so wellProbably related to power/leakage as well, since that would provide the larger number to brag about, and they are finally using metal gates at this node, which helps a lot with leakage.
Adobe is working on Flash Player support for 64-bit platforms as part of our ongoing commitment to the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player. We expect to provide native support for 64-bit platforms in an upcoming release of Flash Player following the release of Flash Player 10.1.
pfff Anand! Wouldn't be surprised if you were Anand my dear terrace215 fellow
Anand just has that unexplainable urge to place Intel in any AMD related article, and if possible at the top:
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets...oc.aspx?i=3673
![]()
Adobe is working on Flash Player support for 64-bit platforms as part of our ongoing commitment to the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player. We expect to provide native support for 64-bit platforms in an upcoming release of Flash Player following the release of Flash Player 10.1.
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