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- Dec 22, 2011
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Processor | Ryzen 7 5800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus Prime X570 Pro |
Cooling | Deepcool LS-720 |
Memory | 32 GB (4x 8GB) DDR4-3600 CL16 |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Radeon RX 7900 XTX Red Devil |
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Case | Lian Li O11D Evo |
Audio Device(s) | Sound Blaster Zx |
Power Supply | Seasonic 750W Focus+ Platinum |
Mouse | Logitech Pro X Superlight 2 DEX |
Keyboard | SteelSeries Apex Pro |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Sigh, the "GPU" portion doesn't really care if they stick a HBCC HBM memory controller or some other memory controller in there.You're right, technically. But as long as you manage to stick with one type of memory, you only have to design (and integrate and test and support) one SKU. For those that thought AMD was able to cut their costs and made Vega HBM only, this is the first confirmed clue that' not the case. Which in turn matters little, because it's not like Vega was cheap to begin with, so even if AMD managed to cut their costs, the end-user wasn't seeing it.
(sorry if the above isn't too clear, but the significance of Vega not being HBM2-only isn't either)
What you're calling "Vega" has several separate IP blocks which can be switched around with different blocks, you could replace the GPU portion with different GPU IP block (for example Polaris-level block), UVD with different version of UVD or ditch the whole UVD for that matter etc etc - and that includes the memory controller as a separate IP block.
Perfect example of this would be Fiji and Tong. They share most of their parts from the same IP level, they're both GCN3 etc etc, but one has HBM and one has GDDR memory controller.
Another example is every single APU they've made - they all share most of their blocks with discrete GPUs but they all use shared DDR memory controller with the CPU, something none of the discrete GPUs has or does.
Similar to this, they could do "Vega" (GCN5) with GDDR memory controller if they so choose, and they've made APU with Vega gfx portion and shared DDR memory controller with the CPU.
There is no "AMD made Vega HBM only", AMD made Vega 10 HBM only, just like they made Fiji HBM only and Tonga GDDR only because there's no sense (or even space) to put two completely different memory controllers in the same chip. They could still do for example Vega 11 with GDDR memory controller or Vega 12 or whatever they want to call such hypothetical chip.