Sunday, March 1st 2009

AMD 32 nm CPU Conquest to Begin in 2010

After spinning off its manufacturing division to The Foundry Co., AMD is left with all the engineering resources it needs to make processors. Contradicting older roadmap slides by the company predicting it would start selling 32 nm processors in 2011, Dirk Meyer, CEO of AMD in an interview with Information Week said that the company is on-track to ship smaller, more powerful processors built on the 32 nm manufacturing process by 2010.

The new manufacturing process would allow the chip maker to step up transistor counts to add more features and computational power. Tomorrow, on March 2, the AMD is expected to close the deal with Advanced Technology Investment Company (ATIC) of Abu Dhabi to form The Foundry Company (TFC). This would render AMD fabless. The company will then, like other fabless market heavyweights such as NVIDIA and VIA, will focus on designing processors, while TFC, its largest foundry partner will manufacture the processors. Currently AMD is tied up with foundry companies such as TSMC and UMC for manufacturing products of its Graphics Products Group, products such as GPUs and chipset.

AMD will be an year behind larger market rival Intel in selling processors built on the 32 nm technology. Intel plans to roll out 32 nm processors by Q4 2009. AMD's designs will be ready by mid-2010, following which volume production of its 32 nm chips will commence by Q4 2010.
Source: Information Week
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35 Comments on AMD 32 nm CPU Conquest to Begin in 2010

#26
DaedalusHelios
Flyordielol, took you Intel monkeys (no pun intended, there are AMD monkeys too) that long to figure out? AMD expects 32nm by 3Q 2010.
Also with 32nm you can expect to see 20-24 core Processors from AMD since AMD designs their CPUs to be VERY small.
But it will have some strange errata again I'm sure. Like DDR3 catching on fire during BSODs and they will fix it in the next stepping. j/k
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#27
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
TBH i think what needs to happen for AMD is to keep hohum on their next CPU lineup, and only reason Intel managed to stay ahead is because they keep on bribing JDEC to approve Crappy Ram (Cough DDR3). If DDR was still around and just had a Die Shrink nothing else, to say 45nm or even 30 it would probably whoop the DDR3 easily thx to tighter timings and not require a High Clock speed, and with the process shrink means less voltage is needed.
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#28
Flyordie
DDR2 is good... I can run my DDR2 @ 3-3-3-10-14-1T @ DDR2-840.
Posted on Reply
#29
Noggrin
wolf"AMD 32 nm CPU Conquest to Begin in 2010"

Conquest you say?
more like "amd will start give us lolz again in 2010" .. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#30
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
wolf"AMD 32 nm CPU Conquest to Begin in 2010"

Conquest you say?
Conquest you read
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#31
KBD
FlyordieDDR2 is good... I can run my DDR2 @ 3-3-3-10-14-1T @ DDR2-840.
yep, DDR2 is still good, DDR3 was rushed to the market for really no good reason. Socket 775 platforms dont benefit that much from it.
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#32
Assimilator
AMD have just barely transitioned to 45nm and now they're talking as if 32nm is going to be a magic bullet to fix all their woes? Their problem is not the fab process, but the fact that the K10/Phenom architecture is simply not competitive with Core i7. I'd rather see a 65nm AMD CPU that can compete with Intel's best as opposed to a 32nm model that can't, thanks very much.
eidairaman1TBH i think what needs to happen for AMD is to keep hohum on their next CPU lineup, and only reason Intel managed to stay ahead is because they keep on bribing JDEC to approve Crappy Ram (Cough DDR3). If DDR was still around and just had a Die Shrink nothing else, to say 45nm or even 30 it would probably whoop the DDR3 easily thx to tighter timings and not require a High Clock speed, and with the process shrink means less voltage is needed.
The amount of factual inaccuracies and bias in this statement is so laughable I'm not even going to bother to dissect them, except to recommend that you check Wikipedia to educate yourself.
KBDyep, DDR2 is still good, DDR3 was rushed to the market for really no good reason. Socket 775 platforms dont benefit that much from it.
DDR3 provides more bandwidth than DDR2, which is one of the reasons why Core i7 is designed around DDR3: that architecture needs massive memory bandwidth to perform well. On the other hand, DDR3 on a S775 platform is a waste because the memory controller simply can't take advantage of the extra bandwidth.
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#33
DaedalusHelios
eidairaman1TBH i think what needs to happen for AMD is to keep hohum on their next CPU lineup, and only reason Intel managed to stay ahead is because they keep on bribing JDEC to approve Crappy Ram (Cough DDR3). If DDR was still around and just had a Die Shrink nothing else, to say 45nm or even 30 it would probably whoop the DDR3 easily thx to tighter timings and not require a High Clock speed, and with the process shrink means less voltage is needed.
Incorrect. I want to know who told you that because thats kind of sad... :wtf:

Is that just something you made up because anyone in the computer field knows that is wrong.. I am not trying to be mean but tight timings only mean so much..
Posted on Reply
#34
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
well explain why even DDR at 600 MHZ clobbers DDR2? It takes alot more bandwidth to overcome performance issues that DDR2/3 has vs DDR1 at lower clocks. Im pretty sure if DDR1 was shrunk down it would probably be able to maintain tight timings and then also require less voltage, but able to ramp the clocks higher without having to loosen the timings to what DDR2/3 requires. Also on the Intel Bit, AMD didnt move really when DDR2 came about but it seems eachtime they move Intel moves on to the next Memory standard, so it sounds like they are actually bribing JDEC to approve standards that are slower, and TBH QPI/HTT dont need all the Bandwidth in the World to get work done as they are a low latency solution.
Posted on Reply
#35
Steevo
Flibolitook so more cores is not always the best way at all.
more cores = more complex software to actually take advantage.
and AMD has not lost any race at all.
Transistors@(X)GHz/price is the real race
for example 2 chips 1 has 500million @3GHz, the other 1billion@3GHz
if chip 1 is $200 and chip 2 is $65 then chip 2 wins even though chip 1 is faster
you have to understand most people are not enthusiast and dont know the difference very well but like the $65 much more than $200 especially since they never even tap into that power the chip 1 has.
so there are 2 races 1, the race for transistors/power/fabrication. race two is same as race 1 but the mighty $ factored in.
More doesn't equal better if you can't keep them busy. ;)
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