Friday, August 22nd 2008
First AMD Fusion Specifications, Hint Toward RV710 Specs.
AMD Fusion could well be the first CPU to feature a graphics processor core. It will incorporate a graphics processor with specifications identical to the RV710. This CPU would be based on the 45 nm silicon fabrication process, and this processor will be manufactured at the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). This GPU will be called "Kong". Here are its specifications:
Source:
IT.com.cn
- Core Frequency between 600 ~ 800 MHz
- 128-bit wide memory bus (DDR3, Side-port supportive)
- 40 Stream Processors
- 8 TMUs, 4 ROPs
- DirectX 10.1 support
- UVD
33 Comments on First AMD Fusion Specifications, Hint Toward RV710 Specs.
As long as it doesn't smell like an onion or a clove of garlic.
I'd say garlic = sideport, so even before implementing DDR3, or on cheap boards without it, the DDR3 Sideport memory should make use ot memory chips present on the motherboard.
#1. Motherboard needs support - otherwise you have no outputs
#1.1. You're really screwed if you want more/different outputs (adding HDMI, etc)
#2. what will happen if you add an unsupported video card (Nvidia for example)? will it be able to be disabled?
bonus#. This will be fun for itx and really tiny systems. Only one heatsink needed...
#1.1 Read above
#2. Duh.
Using a different socket is good, i wasnt aware of that.
Nice idea though.
When you factor in that the average CPU Wattage is around 70W (TDP) these days, its basically irrelevant to temps.
As for the nVidia and ATI losing out on discreet graphics above^ ati and AMD are the same company now so ATI wont be losing out at all, and AMD will have a great selling point as well. This is something Intel can't do (i think) so could be the sole provider of such chips to such market.
imagine a 22nm chip with a dual-core cpu and a hd4870 ;would you buy a discrete graphic card? because this will happen and we already have mobos with ram ,i don't think is hard to put 1 gb ram on mobo
what happens when the gpu is outdated but the cpu is still okay or the opposite?
these questions believe me to come to the conclusion the only want to get rid of the IGP not gpus altogether
This will be great for laptops!! If you can focus most of the heat buildup to one area, then I would think that more efficient cooling methods would follow.
To name a few before the Fusion: Cyrix MediaGX (later AMD Geode), Via Mark CoreFusion & Intel Timna (cancelled though)! So it's really not the first of it's kind.
Fusion will probably be a MCM chip which would imply that only the GPU will be produced at TSMC and the CPU in AMD's own fabs.
To answer MilkyWay: Fusion will have PCI-E integrated, so you could add a discrete card.