One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
I don't get the reason of this. If AMD so afraid of its competitors why bother to show anything at all? How are this fake picture can confirm that they indeed have BD taped-out?
Also, JF said AMD was asked to show a die shot (with this I presumed by an important company, not the thousands of curious enthusiasts). If they can hide all the important bits, then why not? It was probably just to show that they have silicon in house, that Bulldozer is real now, rather than just a blueprint. It was just part of a presentation too - it made for a nice looking slide.
Really, don't make this any more important than it is.![]()
Some intresting about die size. Look at the structures, highlighted in the blue rectangle - this is the same IMC at little normalized size. Orochi look's like Agena - this is big chip compared to Deneb. One Bulldozer module (without L2 cache) is about 80-100% larger than the Deneb core (without L2) and probably has 2MB L2 cache. The expected die size of 45nm orochi is about 450 mm2, but at 32nm it will be about 250 mm2. Too many... I expected that it will be no more than 200 mm2.
Regards. Sorry for my english.
Last edited by Zibi; 09-02-2010 at 02:35 PM.
except the modules and L2 aren't to scale...
As quoted by LowRun......"So, we are one week past AMD's worst case scenario for BD's availability but they don't feel like communicating about the delay, I suppose AMD must be removed from the reliable sources list for AMD's products launch dates"
I remain as unsympathetic as ever. And allow me to tell you why.
Each time a snippet of information pertaining to Bulldozer or Fusion is released, an veritable avalanche of bad information floods the relevant hardware forums. What follows are numerous threads of ideas, counter-ideas, theorizing, and plethora of ideas from enthusiasts who confidently assume they can predict the future.
Why, on the surface this appears to be good. Everyone is thinking and involved. The downside, as I see it, is that for every mistaken guess, bad idea, and incorrect assumption, is another day members of AMD's marketing staff, like JF-AMD, has to spend debunking craziness.
Well, I am actually the only member out there debunking and 90% of my forum work is after hours. So, in terms of "AMD resource" it is pretty small.
I am releasing details because server customer are making their buying decisions about next year right now. That is why you don't see client info.
Server customers don't need die shots, which is why I was against putting that out there.But I don't control all of the information. Had I not been in meetings solid yesterday I could have gotten to the die shot comments earlier before it started to take off.
I see very particular patterns of people who are deliberately spreading FUD, over and over. I can only guess about their motives.
I look forward to taking a real die shot of bulldozer
![]()
heatware chew*
I've got no strings to hold me down.
To make me fret, or make me frown.
I had strings but now I'm free.
There are no strings on me
I can't believe you did that!
You should've done it on Cypress instead!![]()
![]()
vondrashek md![]()
Hope these are good, if they are, i will be making the switch back to AMD!
Your english is fine ... better than mine actually.
Hans is the real expert on deconvoluting die shots and sizes. As has been beat to death, the die shot has been altered for good reasons.
However, Hans did make a guess based on the io pads, which appear to have escaped the photoshop treatment:
http://aceshardware.freeforums.org/p...40.html#p14040
performing the same activity I estimated about 300 mm^2 for a 4 module BD -- so he seems about right, again assuming that the right structures were selected for the scaling. This may seem large to some, but for the markets that this chip would target the margins will be very good.
Last edited by JumpingJack; 09-02-2010 at 08:25 PM.
One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
some day i try AMD![]()
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First of all, I'm quite sure Intel has a very good idea of what AMD is building. And considering the lack of any drastic changes in Intel's lineup... they're not worried.
The fact alone that AMD named the chip Bulldozer, photoshopping images way before release, etc kind of reminds me of how nVidia behaved during Fermi's year long delay.
"If the representatives of the people betray their constituents, there is then no resource left but in the exertion of that original right of self-defense which is paramount to all positive forms of government"
-- Alexander Hamilton
Yes because intel is in the business of doing drastic changes to their roadmap. Because in semiconductor industry you can make changes in architectures as you please
. This is intel not jensen
Also if my memory is correct i recall Ajaidev saying some time ago that intel DID changes to what was "original sandy bridge" in response of possible threat of amd's new architecture and introduced what we now know is the 8c/16t LGA2011 SB... maybe now that has passed some time he can say something about this.
Yup. and thats why Intel hasnt done any changes in the first Athlon era, and then with Athlon 64 era.
However if you look how sandy 2011 looks in comparison to 1355 sandybridge you may think that intel IS trying to move as far as quickly as they can.8 cores, Large caches, 4 channel memory(!) thats pretty insane.
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