Friday, August 9th 2013
AMD Confirms Kaveri will be Available in 2014
AMD confirmed that its next-generation socket FM2+ APUs, codenamed "Kaveri," will begin shipping in Q4-2013, and will be available "very early" in Q1-2014, in the retail (desktop component) channel. Mobile variants of the chip will be available a little later in the same quarter. AMD also described the stuff that "Kaveri" APUs will be made of - four x86-64 cores based on the "Steamroller" micro-architecture, major heterogeneous computing enhancements, a newer integrated graphics processor based on the and "Graphics CoreNext" micro-architecture.
Source:
VR-Zone
52 Comments on AMD Confirms Kaveri will be Available in 2014
I really hope they have something soon.
The fact that AMD "ownes" all the consoles will be key in this battle, because the "CPU side" in consoles are weak as hell. Consoles will GPGPU accelerating everything they can and PC won't have any choise but follow. There will be no more AM3+ CPUs. AMD has no reason to make them. They can't compete with Intel in pure CPU-power, they admit it. Now they need to concentrate on the new way of gaming. The gaming with APU-s created of weak CPU-part and brutal overpowered IGP. The CPU-part has only one reason: To feed the IGP.
Battlefield 4 could be the first APU accelerated game and many will follow.
Btw an fx 8350 will hold it's own against Intels in most games when running at 1080p or higher
Yes, in Games. But most of the games suffering the limitations of the graphic systems. And even so, in sheer power Intel still Ownes AMD...
Fact is fact. Consoles do the lead in game industry. If the consoles have weak CPUs, gamers will have them too. Why? Because every watt you take away from the CPU-part, can be given to the IGP. But as I said, in heterogenous model, there will be no IGP or CPU.
The CPUs floating point engine will be enitely replaced with GPU units which can do that job way better.
By example: The Intel i7-3970X can score between 100 and 200 GFLOPS. The HD7970 scores about 4000 GFLOPS.
And BTW in a few years you won't need an AMD octa core steamroller for playing games 'cause games will use APUs' IGP part as well. AMD has an agreement with EA nad Square Enix. The new Frostfite 3 engine supports APUs, so in the future, every potential EA game can run better on APU than a simple CPU.
In the P4 era CPU manufacturers have run into a barrier. Raising frequencies did not give enough performance regarding to the power consumtpion. So they started the multi-core era. They raising the count of threads instead os frequencie and it worked. Until now. Now they put the GPGPU in, to get another performance boom and push out the limit. This was inevitable.
Manufacturers and devs showd the way they'll going. We can only following them.
AMD need to force everybody toward APU-s and consoles. In this situation, giving the market another round of AM3+ CPU makes absolutely no sense. Think it over.
As far as performance Steamroller is a nice performance bump that won't disappoint. AMD could very well sell a Steamroller desktop CPU should they decide to. Their primary thrust at the moment is to get Kaveri out due to it's massive benefits as an APU. Kaveri literally changes the PC landscape for good and forever.
Eventually most discrete CPU/GPU combos will be replaced by AMD APUs because they will be as powerful as the discrete offerings, cost substantially less, use less power and produce less heat than the discrete CPU/GPU combos. It's all good for consumers but the CPU isn't dead just yet so stay tuned.
oh and komodo is a carbon copy of what vishera actually ended up being so maybe the bin didnt get those plans at all eh.
Consoles being forced to design for GPU power just adds to that. Will be a few years but eventually I could see all this happening. When it does, unless Intel buys out a GPU company, AMD will be nice and comfy on top. Intel still could do something like that. I doubt with nVidia. nVidia is too much of a dick at times. But smaller, yet prolific ones like PowerVR, maybe. Course Intel could just dump lots of money into GPU dev but even if they are doing this now, they are still years behind. Barely catching up right now to first gen APUs.
What would be beautiful irony is AMD licenses x86 from Intel, then Intel licenses GPU tech from AMD.