Monday, September 24th 2012
AMD FX "Vishera" Processor Pricing Revealed
AMD's upcoming second-generation FX "Vishera" multi-core CPUs are likely to appeal to a variety of budget-conscious buyers, if a price-list leaked from US retailer BLT is accurate. The list includes pricing of the first four models AMD will launch some time in October, including the flagship FX-8350. The FX-8350 leads the pack with eight cores, 4.00 GHz clock speed, and 16 MB of total cache. It is priced at US $253.06. The FX-8350 is followed by another eight-core chip, the FX-8320, clocked at 3.50 GHz, and priced at $242.05.
Trailing the two eight-core chips is the FX-6300, carrying six cores, 3.50 GHz clock speed, 14 MB total cache, and a price-tag of $175.77. The most affordable chip of the lot, the FX-4350 packs four cores, 4.00 GHz clock speed, and 8 MB of total cache (likely by halving even the L3 cache). The FX-4350 is expected to go for $131.42. In all, the new lineup draws several parallels with the first-generation FX lineup, with FX-8150, FX-8120, FX-6100, and FX-4150.
Source:
HotHardware
Trailing the two eight-core chips is the FX-6300, carrying six cores, 3.50 GHz clock speed, 14 MB total cache, and a price-tag of $175.77. The most affordable chip of the lot, the FX-4350 packs four cores, 4.00 GHz clock speed, and 8 MB of total cache (likely by halving even the L3 cache). The FX-4350 is expected to go for $131.42. In all, the new lineup draws several parallels with the first-generation FX lineup, with FX-8150, FX-8120, FX-6100, and FX-4150.
221 Comments on AMD FX "Vishera" Processor Pricing Revealed
Looks like AMD cut and paste with full concentration on Steamroller. This pic would have been accurate if Bulldozer delivered.
Except for AMD's FX series, which will presently have 4ghz stock parts. Perhaps AMD has found a way to get those clockspeeds ratcheting up again and for the significant future, and I don't mean by going with a speedracer architecture, which is what Netbust was. Granted, the FX's longer pipeline is a step in that direction, but a step isn't the whole way...
AMD has produced extremely cool-running CPUs with no cold bug in the Phenom II. It is possible they studied that and came to some more general conclusions about heat and frequency and maybe, just MAYBE, AMD has found ways to have climbing frequencies again... Just like in the old days. They surprised the world with the A-64. They can do it again.
Nice table but FX-6200 is missing:confused:
Trinity will be the last APU that will use Bulldozer's design structure. This has been repeated live several times from AMD employees within technology events. 2014 comes Excavator.
AMD already stated and was posted within the forums many times, they are accelerating Steamroller so they can completely replace Bulldozer/Piledriver. Oh, I got that from X-Bit Labs. Perhaps that CPU will follow shortly after.
Steamroller Release Info Links:
The architecture is still slated to debut in 2013 on GlobalFoundries' 28nm bulk process. The improvements look good on paper, but the real question remains whether or not Steamroller will be enough to go up against Haswell.
www.anandtech.com/show/6201/amd-details-its-3rd-gen-steamroller-architecture/2
www.pcper.com/reviews/Processors/AMD-Unveils-Steamroller-Improvements/Steamroller-Slightly-Better-Focus#comment-196142
The architecture is still slated to debut in 2013 on GlobalFoundries' 28nm bulk process. The improvements look good on paper, but the real question remains whether or not Steamroller will be enough to go up against Haswell.
Well, Hasbeen will undoubtedly arrive a LOT later than Intel projects. Reducing the 22nm further is a big head ache. I see Steamroller coming out on 28 nm and being reduced to 24 nm before Hasbeen releases.
Piledriver is based on Bulldozer's design structure.
Steamroller leaves this design structure by way of modifications to the core architecture.
Excavator (Rumoured) is said to be completely modified and if shown side by side with Bulldozer, they would greatly differ.
So I say again,
Trinity will be the last APU that will use Bulldozer's design structure.
I see what you did there.......
Also, RICO was not designed for something like that. You'd have a hard time getting a RICO case against multiple corporations in multiple fields without concrete evidence that they all colluded with one another. Something like the "resetting" of Hard Drive prices could possibly be packaged as a RICO case, but nothing like what Intel and Microsoft do.
Only one of your points was valid because only one of them related to what we're supposed to be talking about. This is a Tech Enthusiast forum, if you want to preach about Macroeconomics, Political Affiliations, and the Justice System, go elsewhere.
change anything. The game and its rules must be changed not through useless reform but rather through transformational revolution where the basis of society is reorganized in an egalitarian fashion with empowerment of the working class in the centers of production andthe whole of society including its mass culture. The culture of exploitation must be replaced with a culture of collective responsibility.
Of course they have one serious chink in their armor. They need workers to produce and profit and the soldiers are mostly working class. The military can be infiltrated and penetrated by serious organized working class youth. They can andwill turn their guns around at the apprpriate time of mass revolutionary consciousness. It happened in Russia nd in China, it can happen again. I realize this is all off-topic but perhaps an intriguing respite from the overkill of the cpu wars. .Nice talking to you.
Debt is also a huge tool they use for the enslavement of the masses. As such, this tyranny is not only economical but psychological, and as such, the people will not rise up in masses to change things. The average Joe is barely making ends meet but he is comfortable enough, contrary to Russia and China. TV and other time sink entertainments make sure he doesn't think about all this stuff, no, the establishment provides ample ways to keep their minds turned off.
Between the pressure to perform at work and "be productive", the economic pressure to make ends meet, the mind-anesthesia or state of fear provided by the media, and the encouragement to BELIEVE, which is the contrary to critical thought, there is very little left of the hardy, independent, self-driven desire for true freedom that would enable such a rise.
I don't think it will happen. We're on our own.