Wednesday, July 3rd 2013

Radeon HD 9000 Series Arrives This October: Report

When AMD re-branded most of its Radeon HD 7000 series SKUs to HD 8000 series, for OEMs, we saw this coming from a parsec away. AMD's next discrete GPU family for the retail channel will be placed along the Radeon HD 9000 series, and it debuts no later than this October, according to a Guru3D report. Interestingly, the report states that the first parts in the family will be based on existing 28 nanometer silicon fab processes, and will be codenamed "Curacao" and "Hainan."

We've had our run-ins with "Curacao," from time to time. It's been rumored to be an upgrade of existing "Tahiti" silicon, with 2,304 stream processors based on Graphics CoreNext 2.0 architecture, 144 TMUs, 48 ROPs, and a 384-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface. The Guru3D report adds to that with the mention of an improved front-end, which adds four asynchronous computing engines (ACEs), and three independent geometry engines.

"Curacao" will make up most of the top-tier, likely Radeon HD 9900 series; while "Hainan" succeeds "Pitcairn," filling up the performance-segment. "Hainan" reportedly features 1,792 GCN 2.0 stream processors, 112 TMUs, 32 ROPs, a 256-bit wide memory interface, and fewer ACEs and geometry engines than "Curacao."
Source: Guru3D
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81 Comments on Radeon HD 9000 Series Arrives This October: Report

#1
ISI300
I call BS on this until there's an official announcement.
Posted on Reply
#2
ViperXTR
Ahh the 9 series actually reminded me of the legendary 9700 Pro :D
Posted on Reply
#3
RCoon
ISI300I call BS on this until there's an official announcement.
Me too, but TPU rarely posts something without having a small fraction of evidence to back it up.
Only 200 or so more stream processors. All in all the "reported" hardware side of curacao doesnt look to be very much of an improvement over the 7970. If this is true, it would be a small step up.
Posted on Reply
#4
Sempron Guy
I think AMD's set-up from HD7xxx to HD9xxx is better than what nvidia is doing with their GTX 7xx series :p
Posted on Reply
#5
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
RCoonMe too, but TPU rarely posts something without having a small fraction of evidence to back it up.
That small fraction is the source link.
Posted on Reply
#6
nodata
'384-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface'.. :shadedshu
Posted on Reply
#7
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
RCoonMe too, but TPU rarely posts something without having a small fraction of evidence to back it up.
Only 200 or so more stream processors. All in all the "reported" hardware side of curacao doesnt look to be very much of an improvement over the 7970. If this is true, it would be a small step up.
If that is true, they should have gone with the 8xxx naming. Or they did this do be able to do some real naming with the 10 series. RADEON HDX! ASUS AMD Radeon HDX 10k990 XTPE DirectCU II rolls off nicely.
Posted on Reply
#8
librin.so.1
RCoonOnly 200 or so more stream processors. All in all the "reported" hardware side of curacao doesnt look to be very much of an improvement over the 7970. If this is true, it would be a small step up.
Tell me, when was the last time we had huge leaps in performance when going "from one series to another"? Exactly - long ago. Yes, I know that sux, but performance increases are getting smaller and smaller and there's nothing we can do about it and just have to love with it. The same is also true for CPUs. *sigh*
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#9
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
nodata'384-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface'.. :shadedshu
Is that a bad thing?
Posted on Reply
#10
Jorge
btarunrIs that a bad thing?
No that's a good thing as more bandwidth is possible.
Posted on Reply
#11
Jorge
As with CPUs, expect GPU performance gains to be evolutionary not revolutionary. There isn't a real need for more graphics power but some enthusiasts feel they need the latest and greatest so manufacturers are glad to oblige.
Posted on Reply
#12
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
JorgeAs with CPUs, expect GPU performance gains to be evolutionary not revolutionary. There isn't a real need for more graphics power but some enthusiasts feel they need the latest and greatest so manufacturers are glad to oblige.
If 2560x1440 are coming down sure we need more GPU power..
Posted on Reply
#13
librin.so.1
FrickIf 2560x1440 are coming down sure we need more GPU power..
No, that's not it. The situation is vastly different.
Computing power is like Dakka - You can never have enough computing power. You'll always need more. And there is no such silly thing as "enough computing power".
Posted on Reply
#14
Patriot
FrickIf that is true, they should have gone with the 8xxx naming. Or they did this do be able to do some real naming with the 10 series. RADEON HDX! ASUS AMD Radeon HDX 10k990 XTPE DirectCU II rolls off nicely.
They already using the HD8xxx naming scheme with the OEMs...
So to avoid more mass confusion HD9xxx ...
Posted on Reply
#15
birdie
I skipped every generation of AMD/NVIDIA GPUs starting from 65nm and ending with 28nm.

This time I will be waiting till 14/16nm shrink which will happen somewhere around 2015.
Posted on Reply
#16
NdMk2o1o
JorgeAs with CPUs, expect GPU performance gains to be evolutionary not revolutionary. There isn't a real need for more graphics power but some enthusiasts feel they need the latest and greatest so manufacturers are glad to oblige.
They oblige? I thought they were out to make as much profit as possible, silly me :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#17
JoePesci
I Hope that the 9970 can compete with the Titan in Order to Start a Price war.

Also, we will soon Need Single GPUs which can Run Games at 3840 x 2160. The New Screen Resolution, which is Four Times as much as the current Standard, is more like a Revolution than an Evolution. This Stands in contrast to what every New Generation of CPUs and GPUs have to offer, which can be considered only as (small) evolutions Lately. I'm Interessed to See how this whole thing will Turn Out.
Posted on Reply
#18
hardcore_gamer
JoePesciI Hope that the 9970 can compete with the Titan in Order to Start a Price war.

Also, we will soon Need Single GPUs which can Run Games at 3840 x 2160. The New Screen Resolution, which is Four Times as much as the current Standard, is more like a Revolution than an Evolution. This Stands in contrast to what every New Generation of CPUs and GPUs have to offer, which can be considered only as (small) evolutions Lately. I'm Interessed to See how this whole thing will Turn Out.
Couldn't agree more. We have to move from 1080 since the consoles have caught up.
Posted on Reply
#19
afw
Sheer performance aside AMD should work on the Performance per watt ratio cos the 7xxx aren't very efficient IMO ...

btw the dual GPU will be "9990" ... thats a lot of 9s ... :D
Posted on Reply
#20
AlienIsGOD
Vanguard Beta Tester
meh i'll snag another 7870 at cheap prices rather than get a 8870 with its 256 bit interface, which seems like a castrated 7950 specs wise
Posted on Reply
#21
hardcore_gamer
afwSheer performance aside AMD should work on the Performance per watt ratio cos the 7xxx aren't very efficient IMO ...

btw the dual GPU will be "9990" ... thats a lot of 9s ... :D
Performance per watt of 78 and 77 series is good.
Posted on Reply
#22
KainXS
this is probably going to be the last series of the Radeon HD line, wonder whats next
Posted on Reply
#23
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
KainXSthis is probably going to be the last series of the Radeon HD line, wonder whats next
Radeon 4K 2000 series, of course.
Posted on Reply
#24
The Mac
UD - Ultra Deffinition

lol
Posted on Reply
#25
TheinsanegamerN
afwSheer performance aside AMD should work on the Performance per watt ratio cos the 7xxx aren't very efficient IMO ...

btw the dual GPU will be "9990" ... thats a lot of 9s ... :D
dont forget their overclocked water cooled edition: the ALL NEW RADEON HD 9999.
Posted on Reply
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