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AMD Polaris architecture – GCN 4.0

So it seems the AIB Polaris cards will be shown at Computex, which is logical after the end of May event. Also it seems AMD will show something at E3 as well.
 
Not a single fury x in stock, interesting. :eek:

That would be incredibly wasteful.

Same for cpu's though although not so much these days. Speed binning parts. Some will hit magical numbers some will almost be duds.

It's kinda like the fury, cores disabled to make a cheaper card yet it's core costs the same to make as the one in the nano and fury X.
 
Also this means if AMD were to use the maximum 2.3x increase possible with 14LPP, they could fit 7.1 Bn transistors in their 232mm2 Polaris 10. So only 0.1 Bn less than the 1080. So I won't count out Polaris 10 till we see the full details :D

where did you get this figure of 2.3 from?
Samsung's own documentation says 28nm to 14nm LPP is a 0.55 reduction, 1.9 times, a bit more than the 1.7 or so that nvidia have gone with (apparently to go for the clock speed advantages), but not to the extent you seem to be suggesting

14nm LPP and 16ff+ are not drastically different and are based on 20nm tech, rather than Intels 14nm which is more accurately called 14nm (TSMC's 10nm is about the same as Intel's 14nm)
 
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where did you get this figure of 2.3 from?
Samsung's own documentation says 28nm to 14nm LPP is a 0.55 reduction, 1.9 times, a bit more than the 1.7 or so that nvidia have gone with (apparently to go for the clock speed advantages), but not to the extent you seem to be suggesting

the 2.3x is AMD saying upt to 2.5x the performance per watt compared to their current offerings.
 
but hes trying to apply it to transistors per mm :/

Yeah that doesn't really fit into what AMD were saying at all, they specifically only talk about it in regards to performance to watt.

In the end though, we just need to wait. I'll be selling my remaining 980Ti and getting a Polaris card to hold me over until Vega, but with Vega apparently coming so soon, we'll have to see what they really do.

Hoping they have something substantial at the end of the month.
 
Think I'll go 1080 this time around but I'm holding off to see what Polaris may bring. I think it's going to be a 290 equivalent but the slightly smaller node may surprise with performance compared to Nvidias offerings?
 
where did you get this figure of 2.3 from?
Samsung's own documentation says 28nm to 14nm LPP is a 0.55 reduction, 1.9 times, a bit more than the 1.7 or so that nvidia have gone with (apparently to go for the clock speed advantages), but not to the extent you seem to be suggesting

14nm LPP and 16ff+ are not drastically different and are based on 20nm tech, rather than Intels 14nm which is more accurately called 14nm (TSMC's 10nm is about the same as Intel's 14nm)

20nm Planar is supposed to be 2x (or 1.82x depending on which 28nm process is compared against)

Samsung/GloFo released this slide at a presentation saying their 14nm process was 'up to 15%' denser than 'others' (so TSMC).

TSMC say 16nm is 2x the density of 28nm, so that means Samsung are claiming 2.3x.

So the 14LPP process is somewhere between 2.1-2.3x the density of 28nm, depending on who's 28nm you use. But it is denser than TSMC's 16nm, that's for sure.
 
Think I'll go 1080 this time around but I'm holding off to see what Polaris may bring. I think it's going to be a 290 equivalent but the slightly smaller node may surprise with performance compared to Nvidias offerings?

price/performance ratio might be something special.
 
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