Thursday, April 14th 2016
AMD to Launch Radeon R7 470 and R9 480 at Computex
Computex 2016 could see some major consumer graphics action, with AMD reportedly planning to launch two mid-thru-performance segment products on the sidelines of the event - the Radeon R7 470, based on the 14 nm "Baffin" (Polaris 11) silicon, and the Radeon R9 480, based on the 14 nm "Ellesmere" (Polaris 10) silicon. The R7 470 could succeed the R7 370 series in not just performance, but also offer a leap in energy efficiency, with a TDP of less than 50W. The R9 480, on the other hand, could feature a TDP of just 110-135W (R9 380 is rated at 190W).
The R9 480, based on the "Ellesmere" (Polaris 10) is shaping up to be a particularly interesting silicon. It's rumored to feature 2,304 stream processors based on the 4th generation Graphics CoreNext architecture, with 2,560 stream processors being physically present on the chip; and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 (GDDR5X-ready) memory controller. 8 GB could be the standard memory amount. AMD could keep the clock speeds relatively low, with 800-1050 MHz GPU clocks. Imagine R9 390-like performance at half its power-draw.
Sources:
VideoCardz, VR World
The R9 480, based on the "Ellesmere" (Polaris 10) is shaping up to be a particularly interesting silicon. It's rumored to feature 2,304 stream processors based on the 4th generation Graphics CoreNext architecture, with 2,560 stream processors being physically present on the chip; and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 (GDDR5X-ready) memory controller. 8 GB could be the standard memory amount. AMD could keep the clock speeds relatively low, with 800-1050 MHz GPU clocks. Imagine R9 390-like performance at half its power-draw.
97 Comments on AMD to Launch Radeon R7 470 and R9 480 at Computex
They could also offer the GDDR5X as the "X" variant 480X.
If that is a selling point for you, great. But consider this. 390 performance was obtainable by the 290/X which is how many years old now?
Will that be enough to take on Pascal? Ehh...not expecting much at this point. Although if rumors are true about Pascal still not having decent compute, it may not matter.
AMD will finally have some competitive laptop GPUs, nice.
Why can't AMD tick tock like Intel and die shrink Fiji?
I'd think that if AMD could have die shrunk Fiji and had access to HBM2 early it might have been enticing. Fiji undoubtedly - after R&D, assembly, and component cost - definitely wouldn't aid AMD's average selling price which presently sits just under $29 per unit, but without access to discrete mobile, the only option was hitch higher price tags to the Duo and S9300 X2, and hope it gains some appeal against a pretty well balanced Firepro W9100 (whose own life is will probably be extended with the 32GB version).
The 480 looks to be on par with a 290X, so good up to 1440P, IF the 490 is a double 480 it will be in the vicinity of the 295x2, and able to handle 4K without the added complexity of CF
And what 490?
Anyway, what's wrong with Fury Nano, that costs roughly as 980 yet is faster, smaller? 4850 was. AMD is pushing for "multi-gpu aware" game development. As far as I understand, it would mean devs to keep in mind "multi-gpu"-ness, which would also simplify drivers (no need to present 2 cards as single one)