• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD Announces Major Technology Partnerships at Future of Compute Event

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,241 (7.55/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
AMD today at its Future of Compute event announced the introduction of the consumer electronic industry's first-ever ultra high-definition (UHD) monitors to feature its innovative, open-standards based FreeSync technology. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., plans to launch the screen synching technology around the world in March 2015, starting with the Samsung UD590 (23.6-inch and 28-inch models) and UE850 (23.6-inch, 27-inch and 31.5-inch models), and eventually across all of Samsung's UHD lineups. FreeSync will enable dynamic refresh rates synchronized to the frame rate of AMD Radeon graphics cards and APUs to maximally reduce input latency and reduce or fully eliminate visual defects during gaming and video playback.

"We are very pleased to adopt AMD FreeSync technology to our 2015 Samsung Electronics Visual Display division's UHD monitor roadmap, which fully supports open standards," said Joe Chan, Vice President of Samsung Electronics Southeast Asia Headquarters. "With this technology, we believe users including gamers will be able to enjoy their videos and games to be played with smoother frame display without stuttering or tearing on their monitors."

In addition, Capcom announced its collaboration with AMD on the AMD Mantle API to enhance Capcom's "Panta-Rhei" engine, enabling enhanced gaming performance and visual quality for upcoming Capcom game titles.

"This will improve the performance of our 'Panta-Rhei' engine, which was originally developed for console platforms," said Masaru Ijuin, technical director, Capcom. "Capcom is evaluating AMD's Mantle technology to help improve the graphics pipeline, and integrate it into 'Panta-Rhei' to provide outstanding benefits and impressive performance for gamers as well as the gaming developers."

AMD's Mantle API technology has been adopted by major developers including Crytek's CRYENGINE, DICE's FrostBite 3 and Oxide's Nitrous engine.
"Samsung and Capcom are strategic partners in helping us bring our revolutionary IP and technology to the homes and offices of consumers around the world," said David Bennett, corporate vice president, AMD APJ. "As we expand our product influence in the commercial sector, we believe open standard technologies like AMD FreeSync and software advancements like our Mantle API will play integral roles in driving the industry forward."

The Future of Compute event kicked off with the addition of the high performance processor codenamed "Carrizo" and mainstream processor codenamed "Carrizo-L" SoCs to the company's mobile Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) product roadmap. Designed as complete solutions for consumers looking to accelerate gaming and productivity applications and enable UHD 4K experiences, these latest mobile APUs are scheduled to ship in 1H 2015, with laptop and All-in-One systems expected in market by mid-year 2015.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Sep 3, 2013
Messages
75 (0.02/day)
Processor Intel i7 6700k
Motherboard Gigabyte Z170X-Gaming 7
Cooling Nocuta nh-d14
Memory Patriot 16GB
Video Card(s) Gibabyte GeForce GTX 1080Ti
Storage (system) Corsair 120GB Force GT, (games) 500GB 840, (data) Seagate 1TB Barracuda + WD 1TB Black
Display(s) AOC AG271QG
Case NZXT Phantom
Power Supply Corsair ax1200i
Mouse g502
Keyboard G710+
Software Win10
ye, somehow I don't find those dates reliable most probable scenario is: APAC Q1/Q2 2015, US Q2/Q3 2015, UE Q4 2015
 
Joined
Apr 29, 2014
Messages
4,290 (1.11/day)
Location
Texas
System Name SnowFire / The Reinforcer
Processor i7 10700K 5.1ghz (24/7) / 2x Xeon E52650v2
Motherboard Asus Strix Z490 / Dell Dual Socket (R720)
Cooling RX 360mm + 140mm Custom Loop / Dell Stock
Memory Corsair RGB 16gb DDR4 3000 CL 16 / DDR3 128gb 16 x 8gb
Video Card(s) GTX Titan XP (2025mhz) / Asus GTX 950 (No Power Connector)
Storage Samsung 970 1tb NVME and 2tb HDD x4 RAID 5 / 300gb x8 RAID 5
Display(s) Acer XG270HU, Samsung G7 Odyssey (1440p 240hz)
Case Thermaltake Cube / Dell Poweredge R720 Rack Mount Case
Audio Device(s) Realtec ALC1150 (On board)
Power Supply Rosewill Lightning 1300Watt / Dell Stock 750 / Brick
Mouse Logitech G5
Keyboard Logitech G19S
Software Windows 11 Pro / Windows Server 2016
I have been waiting to see some monitors with this implemented, I want to see a UHD monitor.
 
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
2,070 (0.39/day)
System Name iJayo
Processor i7 14700k
Motherboard Asus ROG STRIX z790-E wifi
Cooling Pearless Assasi
Memory 32 gigs Corsair Vengence
Video Card(s) Nvidia RTX 2070 Super
Storage 1tb 840 evo, Itb samsung M.2 ssd 1 & 3 tb seagate hdd, 120 gig Hyper X ssd
Display(s) 42" Nec retail display monitor/ 34" Dell curved 165hz monitor
Case O11 mini
Audio Device(s) M-Audio monitors
Power Supply LIan li 750 mini
Mouse corsair Dark Saber
Keyboard Roccat Vulcan 121
Software Window 11 pro
Benchmark Scores meh... feel me on the battle field!
.....amazed/confused as to that Amd can come up with some great partners and collaborations and yet theyre still in the red. Are these just seeds for future awesomeness or press smoke and mirrors about naught......
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
.....amazed/confused as to that Amd can come up with some great partners and collaborations and yet theyre still in the red. Are these just seeds for future awesomeness or press smoke and mirrors about naught......

AMD always plans long term, but they dont have the capital...to capitalize on their investments (and some really shitty previous execs).

Intel blows billions on Itanic and Larrabee with no issue b/c of the success their "marketing" money has brought them. If AMD had that kind of cash and influence you'd see a very different company.
 
Joined
Feb 11, 2009
Messages
5,554 (0.96/day)
System Name Cyberline
Processor Intel Core i7 2600k -> 12600k
Motherboard Asus P8P67 LE Rev 3.0 -> Gigabyte Z690 Auros Elite DDR4
Cooling Tuniq Tower 120 -> Custom Watercoolingloop
Memory Corsair (4x2) 8gb 1600mhz -> Crucial (8x2) 16gb 3600mhz
Video Card(s) AMD RX480 -> RX7800XT
Storage Samsung 750 Evo 250gb SSD + WD 1tb x 2 + WD 2tb -> 2tb MVMe SSD
Display(s) Philips 32inch LPF5605H (television) -> Dell S3220DGF
Case antec 600 -> Thermaltake Tenor HTCP case
Audio Device(s) Focusrite 2i4 (USB)
Power Supply Seasonic 620watt 80+ Platinum
Mouse Elecom EX-G
Keyboard Rapoo V700
Software Windows 10 Pro 64bit
.....amazed/confused as to that Amd can come up with some great partners and collaborations and yet theyre still in the red. Are these just seeds for future awesomeness or press smoke and mirrors about naught......

amd is not in the red, as with any company they are just talking about less profit.
companies have this weird need to make more profit each year, but a profit is still a profit meaning you are fine.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2011
Messages
2,785 (0.58/day)
Location
New Zealand
System Name MoneySink
Processor 2600K @ 4.8
Motherboard P8Z77-V
Cooling AC NexXxos XT45 360, RayStorm, D5T+XSPC tank, Tygon R-3603, Bitspower
Memory 16GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3-1600C8
Video Card(s) GTX 780 SLI (EVGA SC ACX + Giga GHz Ed.)
Storage Kingston HyperX SSD (128) OS, WD RE4 (1TB), RE2 (1TB), Cav. Black (2 x 500GB), Red (4TB)
Display(s) Achieva Shimian QH270-IPSMS (2560x1440) S-IPS
Case NZXT Switch 810
Audio Device(s) onboard Realtek yawn edition
Power Supply Seasonic X-1050
Software Win8.1 Pro
Benchmark Scores 3.5 litres of Pale Ale in 18 minutes.
Intel blows billions on Itanic and Larrabee with no issue b/c of the success their "marketing" money has brought them. If AMD had that kind of cash and influence you'd see a very different company.
Intel's success didn't come from "marketing", it came from the fact that they capitalized on technologies (EPROM, SRAM, DRAM) when other semicon companies were treating the IC industry as a hobby (Motorola, Fairchild, RCA), or whose business became introverted after propeller-heads drove the company instead of strategic planning (National Semi, Zilog). Intel was built on the removal of bubble memory from the market, and some smart intuition leading to industry leading yields ( Gordon Moore's "doping" of silicon gate MOS oxide layers, Dov Frohman's negative voltage "walking out" process), and a fundamental core strategy of driving markets rather than reacting to them. You can play the "what if" game to your hearts content, but the fact remains that Intel's IP between 1968 and 1971 built the company while AMD were still dicking around selling Fairchild's TTL chips, and highlights the difference between a company founded by engineers and one founded by marketing. The last reason is why AMD exists at all, since it was an engineers enthusiasm- namely Intel co-founder Bob Noyce, whose $50K investment in AMD assured its incorporation in the first place.

Intel can (and will) make mistakes. Itanium/IA-64 is a sterling example, but the multiple approaches to the market also yield viable results amid the failures. For every Netburst design ethos there is a P6/Pentium-M/Core development line. This is something AMD have not really copied until it was possibly too late. When their K5 architecture floundered their "Plan B" was buying IP (NexGen), when the original K8 stalled out (with Jim Keller), they drafted in Dirk Meyer and the ex-DEC Alpha team, when their graphics turned up empty, they bought IP (ATI) rather than hiring a team and licencing the IP, when they wanted to get into ARM they bought IP (SeaMicro). When a company stagnates or want to play it safe they buy IP rather than develop it themselves.
AMD aren't in Intel's league, and never really have been. They managed to punch above their weight with some astute engineering decisions and alliances (such as bringing Microsoft and the open source community in when drafting AMD64), but more often than not the spark to keep the company has had to be purchased rather than developed within.
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2007
Messages
3,946 (0.63/day)
Location
Police/Nanny State of America
Processor OCed 5800X3D
Motherboard Asucks C6H
Cooling Air
Memory 32GB
Video Card(s) OCed 6800XT
Storage NVMees
Display(s) 32" Dull curved 1440
Case Freebie glass idk
Audio Device(s) Sennheiser
Power Supply Don't even remember
Intel's success didn't come from "marketing", it came from the fact that they capitalized on technologies (EPROM, SRAM, DRAM) when other semicon companies were treating the IC industry as a hobby (Motorola, Fairchild, RCA), or whose business became introverted after propeller-heads drove the company instead of strategic planning (National Semi, Zilog). Intel was built on the removal of bubble memory from the market, and some smart intuition leading to industry leading yields ( Gordon Moore's "doping" of silicon gate MOS oxide layers, Dov Frohman's negative voltage "walking out" process), and a fundamental core strategy of driving markets rather than reacting to them. You can play the "what if" game to your hearts content, but the fact remains that Intel's IP between 1968 and 1971 built the company while AMD were still dicking around selling Fairchild's TTL chips, and highlights the difference between a company founded by engineers and one founded by marketing. The last reason is why AMD exists at all, since it was an engineers enthusiasm- namely Intel co-founder Bob Noyce, whose $50K investment in AMD assured its incorporation in the first place.

Intel can (and will) make mistakes. Itanium/IA-64 is a sterling example, but the multiple approaches to the market also yield viable results amid the failures. For every Netburst design ethos there is a P6/Pentium-M/Core development line. This is something AMD have not really copied until it was possibly too late. When their K5 architecture floundered their "Plan B" was buying IP (NexGen), when the original K8 stalled out (with Jim Keller), they drafted in Dirk Meyer and the ex-DEC Alpha team, when their graphics turned up empty, they bought IP (ATI) rather than hiring a team and licencing the IP, when they wanted to get into ARM they bought IP (SeaMicro). When a company stagnates or want to play it safe they buy IP rather than develop it themselves.
AMD aren't in Intel's league, and never really have been. They managed to punch above their weight with some astute engineering decisions and alliances (such as bringing Microsoft and the open source community in when drafting AMD64), but more often than not the spark to keep the company has had to be purchased rather than developed within.

In regards to their situation against AMD since pentiums, it's all from their illegal business practices (so called marketing money) and exploiting their already huge bank account/market dominance. AMD was almost always a better buy (and ridiculous good buy in the K7-K8 eras). They lost tons of marketshare at the height of their success. No doubt billions in revenue were lost. R&D isn't cheap.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2011
Messages
2,785 (0.58/day)
Location
New Zealand
System Name MoneySink
Processor 2600K @ 4.8
Motherboard P8Z77-V
Cooling AC NexXxos XT45 360, RayStorm, D5T+XSPC tank, Tygon R-3603, Bitspower
Memory 16GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3-1600C8
Video Card(s) GTX 780 SLI (EVGA SC ACX + Giga GHz Ed.)
Storage Kingston HyperX SSD (128) OS, WD RE4 (1TB), RE2 (1TB), Cav. Black (2 x 500GB), Red (4TB)
Display(s) Achieva Shimian QH270-IPSMS (2560x1440) S-IPS
Case NZXT Switch 810
Audio Device(s) onboard Realtek yawn edition
Power Supply Seasonic X-1050
Software Win8.1 Pro
Benchmark Scores 3.5 litres of Pale Ale in 18 minutes.
In regards to their situation against AMD since pentiums, it's all from their illegal business practices (so called marketing money) and exploiting their already huge bank account/market dominance.
Again you seem to painting with very broad strokes. It is a matter of record that Intel paid for Dell and a few other OEMs not to sign contracts for AMD procs. It is also a matter of record that during the same timespan AMD was unable to fulfil orders it had signed - notably Hewlett-Packard (who were the #2 OEM at the time behind Dell). It is also a matter of record that Jerry Sanders and his lapdog Ruiz both vetoed outsourcing (20% of production allowed under the cross licence agreement) until the shortages became critical. And of course, as soon as Dell signed up and AMD could crow about having the #1 OEM onside, AMD starved HP for chips who then made up the shortfall with Intel contracts.....Dell went into its meltdown (financials, recalls, sales drop-off) and HP assumed the mantle of #1 primarily powered now by Intel.
So how is AMD's bad planning and hubris over courting a halo vendor (Dell) at the expense of their then current contracts the fault of Intel. You did allude to bad management, and that is precisely what this was over an extended period of time. Intel shoulders some of the blame with its "loyalty discounts", but if that were the only mitigating factor in AMD's decline. the payout would have been much greater than a $1bn. It doesn't help when your CEO+president awards himself shares, makes himself un-fireable by unilaterally changing company statutes, and needs the threat of legal action to rein him in.

I extensively researched AMD some time ago for a published article, and some of the less publicized aspects of their growth and decline make for sobering reading, and it is far from the black and white "Intel is to blame" argument that many people cling to.
 
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
3,881 (0.84/day)
Gibbo over at OverclockersUK

Hi there

Spoke to LG.

Hoping to get 29" and 34" super-wide flat IPS panels early next year with FreeSync which shall be exclusive to OcUK in UK.


So IPS and Freesync, boooooooooooooooooom!

Updated version of one of these 29" & 34" models. That be nice and different.
 
Joined
Dec 22, 2011
Messages
3,890 (0.82/day)
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
Motherboard MSI MAG B550 TOMAHAWK
Cooling AMD Wraith Prism
Memory Team Group Dark Pro 8Pack Edition 3600Mhz CL16
Video Card(s) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 FE
Storage Kingston A2000 1TB + Seagate HDD workhorse
Display(s) Samsung 50" QN94A Neo QLED
Case Antec 1200
Power Supply Seasonic Focus GX-850
Mouse Razer Deathadder Chroma
Keyboard Logitech UltraX
Software Windows 11
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
3,881 (0.84/day)
All panels exhibit some kind of bleeding and its varied panel to panel. Just look at the countless complaints from ASUS RoG Swift users for just backlight bleeding alone in various forums. Some are more then willing to put up with panel imperfections like bleeding and dead pixels because they consider themselves lucky not to be plagued by the various other issues. Similar kind of people will be buying these and if bleeding is the worst thing they have to look forward to, Not that bad.
 
Joined
Jul 18, 2007
Messages
2,693 (0.42/day)
System Name panda
Processor 6700k
Motherboard sabertooth s
Cooling raystorm block<black ice stealth 240 rad<ek dcc 18w 140 xres
Memory 32gb ripjaw v
Video Card(s) 290x gamer<ntzx g10<antec 920
Storage 950 pro 250gb boot 850 evo pr0n
Display(s) QX2710LED@110hz lg 27ud68p
Case 540 Air
Audio Device(s) nope
Power Supply 750w superflower
Mouse g502
Keyboard shine 3 with grey, black and red caps
Software win 10
Benchmark Scores http://hwbot.org/user/marsey99/
been a while since lg where the king of screens.

sammy hold that crown today imo.
 
Joined
Dec 4, 2012
Messages
81 (0.02/day)
Am beginning to hate AMD like most here bcoz the`re always throwing a spanner in the works of Nvidia e.g. G-Sync/Free-Sync, Cuda/HSA-HUMa-OpenCL, Nvidia DX12 support/MANTLE and so on. If AMD don't want to make money, why not let Nvidia make it?

Am wondering if AMD is trolling Nvidia.
 

AsRock

TPU addict
Joined
Jun 23, 2007
Messages
19,085 (3.00/day)
Location
UK\USA
Am beginning to hate AMD like most here bcoz the`re always throwing a spanner in the works of Nvidia e.g. G-Sync/Free-Sync, Cuda/HSA-HUMa-OpenCL, Nvidia DX12 support/MANTLE and so on. If AMD don't want to make money, why not let Nvidia make it?

Am wondering if AMD is trolling Nvidia.

WTF, chances are AMD had both on the back burner and had no option to make them public and if they even were not holding them back because of funds they had to come up with some thing.

I guess your company would of been bust even faster than AMD as it would of just sat there and took it in the ass.
 
Joined
Dec 4, 2012
Messages
81 (0.02/day)
WTF, chances are AMD had both on the back burner and had no option to make them public and if they even were not holding them back because of funds they had to come up with some thing.

I guess your company would of been bust even faster than AMD as it would of just sat there and took it in the ass.

Calm down, I was being sarcastic.
 
Top