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I cant imagine 300-400Ghz at the top end is going to be the difference between 390 and a 980Ti.Thats the thing - from what we have seen P10 probably has 2560 shaders at least and if they are running at around 1GHZ with the uarch improvements,I can see why it might be around R9 390/390X level performance.
But if AMD could clock the cores higher,ie,like 1.3GHZ to 1.4GHZ that would be a different kettle of fish. That would be more like GTX980TI level performance. I wonder if that is why we have not seen Polaris released yet??
Looking at the Pascal thread Nvidia looks like they will hit 1.9GHZ with their new cards for boost clocks. Its a bit worrying all the leaks we have seen about Polaris seem to be between 800MHZ to 1GHZ or thereabouts.
I cant imagine 300-400Ghz at the top end is going to be the difference between 390 and a 980Ti.
My guess is that 'properly' clocked, P10 should do about 390X level, maybe a bit better. This is where the original 2x performance/watt claims fit in. Conservatively clocked, it might do the newly claimed 2.5x performance/watt, but only perform close to 390 level.
I cant imagine 300-400Ghz at the top end is going to be the difference between 390 and a 980Ti.
My guess is that 'properly' clocked, P10 should do about 390X level, maybe a bit better. This is where the original 2x performance/watt claims fit in. Conservatively clocked, it might do the newly claimed 2.5x performance/watt, but only perform close to 390 level.
I wouldn't worry too much.
Its the same as with maxwell..."wooo my 970 can run at 1500MHz!" .....and offers similar performance as a 390 at 1150MHz.
Looks more like a 40% advantage there.That would would be 30% to 40% higher clockspeed than an R9 390 or R9 390X,which are around 1GHZ,with the fastest custom cards hitting 1.1GHZ.
Look at the latest TPU review:
http://tpucdn.com/reviews/ASUS/GTX_950/images/perfrel_2560_1440.png
At 2560X1440,the difference between an R9 390X and a GTX980TI is around 30% or thereabouts.
Nvidia has managed to increase the boost clocks massive over AMD on 28NM and AMD has actually managed to regress in some ways.
This pretty much. Cutting the clock cuts power dramatically (squared relationship), AMD got a big PR win with the Nano by hand selecting the best chips and cutting the frequency a little to give low power. If they use modest clocks then they will hit their 2x performance per watt marketing. This also leaves space for AMD to release a higher clocked higher performing card.
Chips also are designed to run optimally at certain clock speeds. You can increase the clock speed by making some design decisions. The Pascal GP100 is a very big chip with very high clocks, that is no coincidence. Lower density chips with increased spacing between hot components can allow increased clocking. Looks like nvidia might have done something similar with G104, a slightly bigger chips and facilitating clock speeds.
Looks more like a 40% advantage there.
And you dont get a linear 10% improvement for every 100Mhz clock speed increase.
With a 200Mhz boost to my 970, I'm generally getting about a 10% performance increase.
If a Hawaii XT has 2816 Shaders @ 438mm^2 then P10 has 3041 Shaders (+8%)
Samsung 14nm FinFet node is 2x density of TSMC 28nm. P10 measures 232mm^2
So by that measure, and not including any GCN 4.0 architectural performance improvements or performance improvements from faster transistor switching in 14nm FinFet and at the same 1050Mhz clock rates a GTX 980TI would be 22% faster.
Again, only if you ignore improvements from faster transistors and architectural improvements.
According to Samsung, 14LPE was 2x the density, and 14LPP is 'up to' 2.3x.
Right, LPE is early 14nm, much like 28nm of which GPU's are built on 28nm LPP 14nm are also likely to be built on LPP.
Up scaled that would make P10 about the size of a Fury-X.
Right, LPE is early 14nm, much like 28nm of which GPU's are built on 28nm LPP 14nm are also likely to be built on LPP.
Up scaled that would make P10 about the size of a Fury-X.
I wouldn't worry too much.
Its the same as with maxwell..."wooo my 970 can run at 1500MHz!" .....and offers similar performance as a 390 at 1150MHz.
This pretty much. Cutting the clock cuts power dramatically (squared relationship)
FYI this isn't true. You may have been thinking of voltage, as P=V^2/R.
I believe the frequency - power relationship is linear, which also seems intuitive IMO
Such a shame AMD were not 6 months ahead and I would have liked to have seen them out first but if they are late, not good at all.