Monday, October 17th 2011
AMD's First 28 nm GPUs in December
It looks like AMD will have the symbolic achievement of launching its first GPUs built on the new 28 nanometer process in 2011 itself. Sources told Heise.de that AMD is working towards launching some of its planned 28 nm GPUs in the second week of December, 2011. One of these sources specifically named December 06. Details on whether the launched GPU will be for the mobile (notebook) or desktop (graphics card) platforms; or even whether it will use the VLIW4 or so-called 'NextGen' compute architecture, are not known at this point.
Another source reinforced the theory that the launch will be more about symbolism than volume manufacturing for sales. It's likely that a small number of these GPUs will be manufactured, just about enough to send to OEMs for their qualification, and perhaps even the media for published performance testing. We expect these GPUs to be lower-end or mid-range GPUs, and since AMD is reserving the NextGen compute architecture for only the high-end GPU part, these ones will most likely use VLIW4.
Sources:
Heise.de, MarketWire
Another source reinforced the theory that the launch will be more about symbolism than volume manufacturing for sales. It's likely that a small number of these GPUs will be manufactured, just about enough to send to OEMs for their qualification, and perhaps even the media for published performance testing. We expect these GPUs to be lower-end or mid-range GPUs, and since AMD is reserving the NextGen compute architecture for only the high-end GPU part, these ones will most likely use VLIW4.
46 Comments on AMD's First 28 nm GPUs in December
IMO that could be the reason why the released early in december and not Q2 of 2012. people wana upgrade at christmas as retailers are more likely to do discounts, but we shall see
hd6770
hd6790
hd6830??
hd6850
hd6870
hd6890??
hd6930??
hd6950
hd6970
hd6990
I'm guessing if it isn't a 7XXX series card or for the mobile market, they will call one of these.
So the midrange GPU's are still VLIW4. Does that mean they are die-shrinks of Northern Islands ?
Que "Nvidia also" moment in 3...2...1...
to put it into clearer context.....
If AMDs new CPU consumed more power, created more heat but pulled well ahead of Intels current processors, people would be more forgiving. higher power consumption is bad, but if it performs like a boss. enthusiasts will overlook it a little
I would possibly be willing to say the same for Nvidia as they also announced that they had started sampling what seams to be low end parts a few weeks back
I didn't say it doesn't matter.
In the current generation, the top-end GPU uses VLIW4, while every other GPU uses VLIW5.
NextGen is more advanced than VLIW4, which is in turn more advanced than VLIW5.
to the bla