Monday, December 12th 2011

January 9 Launch Date for AMD Radeon HD 7900
Ladies and Gentlemen with graphics card upgrade plans, circle the date January 09, 2012, for this is going to be the day AMD will launch its next generation high-performance graphics cards in the Radeon HD 7900 series, according to reliable market sources DonanimHaber spoke with. On the 9th, AMD is expected to unveil at least two new SKUs in the HD 7900 series, most likely, HD 7970 and HD 7950. These will be based on the new 28 nm "Tahiti" silicon that will use completely redesigned number-crunching machinery, and a very wide memory bus.
Source:
DonanimHaber
146 Comments on January 9 Launch Date for AMD Radeon HD 7900
Normally when one company is behind, it starts to release hype to detract from the opposing companies impending release.
We'll know an AMD release is imminent if the gargantuan NV PR behemoth starts rolling.
If it works, I'm fine with it in every way. If it turns into something that likes to start on fire due to the cheaper components, well.. I don't like my video cards on fire.
7970, ivy bridge, PERFECT!
You're just some wannabe Internet tough guy with knowledge. I'd argue with you but at the end of the day it gets packaged in a bag of douche.
My money is in the bank waiting... I want single GPU performance, this is it.
Well I should actually say all the money is not there yet but a couple more weeks of 13 hour days the money for those cards and Ivy bridge will be there for sure
It's interesting why it isn't realeased now when they could make big sales , they could rush it a bit but no , in january when pockets are empty and people barelly recover from new year.
Then when your B-day comes around, you run down the stairs kicking and screaming all happy with the gift you wrapped for yourself and tell your girlfriend thank you thank you sweetheart, this is great, thanks for the gift, now can I open it :D
First, the highlight part. My response: At least I've got knowledge, which is more than I can say for you.
Now the HD7900 VRM argument. Your argument from the beginning is that the card lacks the Volterra Digital PWM, "their best part", and a part that nVidia is lacking. Remember, you were the one that made it clear that nVidia cards don't have it. Ok, now that that is established, nVidia has been pumping out more powerful single GPU cards for years, and at the same time cards that suck down way more power! So obviously a Volterra PWM isn't important when you have a well designed card. /QED
You kind of killed your own argument before you finished your first post.
Now that's clearly not the only thing. They switched to much of the exact VRM they used in the second revision of 6970 (the one btarunr explained). The ones that look like original cards but aren't. Either way, this is a significant downgrade in card quality over the top end VRM they used for years.
Also, the HD6970 non-reference boards that didn't use a Volterra design all hit 1GHz+, and all overclocked pretty much just as well as the reference design if not better. So, again, obviously you don't need a Volterra to have a good high quality card.
Their GPUs have always been the best part of their cards, and what has made their cards great. The Volterra PWM design wasn't necessary, and the non-reference cards proved that.