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With skyrocketing manufacturing costs accompanied by minimal improvements ?After the bad experience with chiplets, is it really a good idea to move on with them?
GPUs are very sensitive to latencies, they work best when the latencies are extremely low, which means a monolithic design, chiplets are good for CPUs, but extremely bad for GPUs.
That's why CrossFire is no longer supported.
Do they want to invent a new type of CrossFire?
A Multi-GCD design is the most important thing AMD could bring out to be more competitive. Instead of developing 5-6 chips, a single block (GCD) would serve all segments, simply by putting these chips together. Billions would be saved in the process.
But it's obvious that such a design needs to drastically change the graphics processing model.
"The new patent (PDF) is dated November 23, 2023, so we'll likely not see this for a while. It describes a GPU design radically different from its existing chiplet layout, which has a host of memory cache dies (MCD) spread around the large main GPU die, which it calls the Graphics Compute Die (GCD). The new patent suggests AMD is exploring making the GCD out of chiplets instead of just one giant slab of silicon at some point in the future. It describes a system that distributes a geometry workload across several chiplets, all working in parallel. Additionally, no "central chiplet" is distributing work to its subordinates, as they will all function independently.