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Indeed. Some posters have selective memory.I take it we are just ignoring Mike Rayfield now then.
really feasible such as ‘Radeon VII ‘ which was to be a Vega 20 based consumer facing part that cost $750 to build and would barely tie in with an [NVIDIA] GTX 1080 Ti.
Indeed. Some posters have selective memory.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/wccftech.com/exclusive-mike-rayfield-amd-retires/amp/
But I guess the manager of the entire Radeon group did not know about bulk purchases
Mate, you have no idea how much it costs to make, the same as me and all the others on this forum. You are stating sites as fact, when in reality, they are spewing made up stuff also. AMD would be stupid to make a GPU and sell at a loss. That just beggars belief.You are wrong.
Question: When the MI50 / MI60 cards that are sold for $8,000 to $10,000, how much would you expect the production cost to be? Don't say $400 because you will be as much fake as the ones who you accuse of being fake.
The BOM is clear and it is:
16 GB HBM2 = $320
Packaging = $100
Cooler and PCB = $75
The rest of the cost is split between TSMC 7nm manufacturing cost and AMD's engineering bill to make the card.
Just accept it and stay quiet
Dp quoting click bait bs, oh what a shocker. Wccftech that bastion of total truth. Funny how when that site is quoted people usually laugh it off but when it suits an agenda they're all of a sudden legit.
I thought reducing process size also reduces the cost? hasn't this always been the case? Isn't it one of the points of making smaller processors?
So now AMD release 7nm it cost more? LOL
Maybe I been lied to for years!
I thought reducing process size also reduces the cost? hasn't this always been the case? Isn't it one of the points of making smaller processors?
So now AMD release 7nm it cost more? LOL
Maybe I been lied to for years!
If the die was literally identical in design, just "shrank" then I guess the die would be cheaper, but Vega 20 has a lot more "stuff" added to it so it's a bigger die, relatively speaking. Plus, a mature process will be cheaper, but right now TSMC's 7nm is (essentially) new so I should imagine there will be some level of additional overhead as they dial the kit in, probably recouping development costs through markup too.
Reducing the size reduces costs if the production cost per mm^2 stays the same.
However, 7mm costs 4x as much for the same die size. The vega20 chip might something like 35% smaller on 7nm, but production costs are 4x higher for equal area.
I've posted multiple independent sources from industry analysts pointing out this fact.
Thanks why Nvidia is not using 7nm, it is too expensive u til the process is mature enough that yields are extremely high
They could have still been instinct card dies not just in the bin
They might of been, I thought so at first but seeing as they have exactly the same stats as an MI50 chances are they're not, Personally i think it might be more of a case of having more markets giving more sales, Of course there's also the possibility that they were destined for the bin due to failing something they test for after the final phase of the module's construction, but at the end of the day it's anyones guess.
Why would a company like AMD use something that cost more
And there he goes again, unable to grasp the concept that companies ordering in bulk aren't going to pay the listed prices. Think its you that needs to stay quiet until you get a clue about how these things work.
Why would a company like AMD use something that cost much more? Its not like they have money to throw away. People keep saying this about HBM memory! The truth is AMD isn't stupid and if they was paying over the price for the return rate do you honestly think they would be pushing HBM and 7nm??
What for?
The truth is like Greg said no one on here knows what AMD is paying! For all we know they might have some killer bulk deals lol
Sure you can read info from the internet but that doesn't mean AMD is also paying them prices.
Again AMD is the leading company in computer tech, they the only company that sells CPU and GPUs if you think for one min they dont get crazy deals.... The only sector AMD is playing catch up in is the PC graphics sector and do you really think AMD would release GPUs that they simply just loose money on? FURY X would have been the last HBM card if that was the case! We now have VEGA and VEGA 7 coming.
/These are my facts for you.
Consider this: at a time when AMD have finally found some financial stability and starting to regain technological and performance leadership, do you think they are desperate enough to lose money on Vega 20 packages just to achieve some superficial PR win and some kind of parity with Nvidia?
I would only say "yes" if many factors fell into alignment.
Personally, I think Radeon 7 is powered by a Vega 20 package that didn't meet the requirements in testing to be a MI50, more than likely power draw is too high. So that package is scheduled to be discarded, and AMD take the financial hit. It's only by virtue of Turing's raster performance being underwhelming and astronomical prices that a window has opened up for AMD to repurpose those trash-destined MI50 packages as a gaming card and recoup some kind of money from it.
If Turing saw significant raster gains over Pascal, I don't think AMD would have bothered with Radeon 7 because they still couldn't compete
If RTX cards were couple hundred bucks cheaper, I don't think AMD would have bothered with Radeon 7 because they couldn't match prices
Of course we'll never know what AMD's thought process is regarding Radeon 7, but for me it makes no sense to give up thousands of dollars per sale of MI50 cards to divert their Vega packages to create a Radeon 7 as an actual, proper and planned graphics card. The end result is Rayfield's "unfeasible" has actually come into existence, but I believe it's from aligning circumstance, not by design.
I thought reducing process size also reduces the cost? hasn't this always been the case? Isn't it one of the points of making smaller processors?
So now AMD release 7nm it cost more? LOL
Maybe I been lied to for years!
Why would wccftech make up news piece about a GPU that at the time AMD said wouldn't release for consumers and literally no one thought we would see? With a quoted price and performance nearly spot on reality weeks before AMD announced anything.
When the whole time the article has nothing to do with R7 pricing but about the SVG being let go?