Thursday, January 20th 2011
AMD Slips in Radeon HD 6770 and HD 6750 for OEMs
AMD implemented its plans to rebrand Radeon HD 5700 series to HD 6700 series, by listing up Radeon HD 6770 and HD 6750 on its website. For now, it's available only to OEMs. There are no changes between the 5700 and 6700 as far as specifications go, except HDMI 1.4a support. At most, you can see a different-looking cooler shroud on the reference-design graphics cards. Other than that, they're the same. The HD 6770 is based on the 40 nm Juniper silicon, with 800 VLIW5 stream processors, and 1 GB of GDDR5 memory over a 128-bit wide memory interface. The HD 6750 on the other hand has 720 stream processors. There's no information at present on when (or if) AMD plans to release this to the consumer market.
40 Comments on AMD Slips in Radeon HD 6770 and HD 6750 for OEMs
I just wonder if we will see the same people going "ZOMG REBRAND I'M NEVER BUYING ATI AGAIN" that said it about nVidia when they rebranded G92(ignoring that ATi had done it previously with R580)... I wonder were those people are going to go now? Back to nVidia, or maybe Matrox or S3?:laugh:
Its a bit like with the cars OPEL Astra and the Vauxhaul Astra same thing.
I mean, a Peugeot 406 is better than a 306 right?
It's a bad idea to rebrand. Nvidia did it like crazy buggers and it wasn't good then, it still isn't good now.
All that being said, I think if you're buying components and you dont do any research into your possible purchase, you deserve a rebrand! ;)
In any case, it's apparent to me that these aren't announced as Turks and Caicos.
amd doing bad moves with oem. they did worse with phenom ii 840
that is really an athlon rebranded to phenom
If you want to be mad at somebody, be mad at the OEMs
Or 5770 will drop down and 6770 takes its place?
By doing so the consumers will, in the end, have a full range of 6xxx-series cards to choose from, once the transistion is complete and the old stock of 5-series cards has sold out. Performance-wise the new 67-cards will match perfectly into the lineup, with the 69xx-cards at the top, the 68xx-cards at the position the 57xx-cards once held in the old lineup, and the 67xx-cards below them.
I think it would have been more confusing the have a full 6xxx-range of cards with two 57xx-cards in between, wouldn't it?
Whereas, if AMD had something between 5770 and a GTX560, aka real 6770, which had significant efficiencies and quietness on its side, then I would have gone for that.
For me, as powerful as possible but with the constraint: as quiet and as efficient as possible.
AMD have just dropped the "magic x770 formula". nV wins.
well that sucks.