RX 6950 XT 5120 cores, RX 7900 XT 5376 cores, little performance improvement.
6900XT vanilla model is compared to 7900XTX vanilla model. The same price, but RDNA3 card is 50% faster in 4K. It's quite a decent uplift.
If they ever release 7950XTX, that would the a card to compare with 6950XT, as refresh cards have beefed up specs and performance.
We know that 7900XTX can reach 3GHz in non-gaming workloads, such as Blender. If AMD pursued a new stepping of Navi 31 die (they must be testing it in labs by now), we could see interesting results on refresh cards. It remains to be seen whether they succeed in this task.
Navi 3.5 is mentioned in the context of AM5 so might be iGPUs only, also could be just Display / Media engine update.
Yes Ryzen 8000 series was mentioned with rDNA3.5 for iGPU.
Both mobile Strix Point and desktop Granite Ridge will have enhanced RDNA3 graphics. It could be called RDNA3.5 for desktop or 'RDNA3+' for mobility, or one name for all SKUs. AMD is flirting with '0.5' and '+' labels. It does not really matter. Strix will be introduced at CES 2024 and will feature (refined?) AIE, which does take a sizebale space on a die. Desktop Zen5 is unlikely to get AIE until I/O die receives a major upgrade.
AMD doesnt know what it's targeting, given its own 6600xt undermines the 7600 at every turn. The 4060ti was a wet fart that showed how gimped nvidia's GPUs are, and the 7600 was an embarrassment that really showed off how little rDNA3 (or its compiler) brings to the table.
It's just not well-priced at the moment. It will be a good card below $250.
It's like TV models gen-to-gen. You get a few new perks, a bit more brightness, one or two new codecs, 2-3W more on speakers.
Not a revolution, just a bit of evolution.
The line between desktop and mobile is very very blurry:
- You have 3000/4000/5000-series APUs which are mobile chips with an IGP shoved into an AM4 package.
- You have monolithic mobile parts like the Ryzen 3 4100, Ryzen 5 4500, Ryzen 5 5500 hiding in among the chiplet-based true AM4 parts.
That's ok. Nothing wrong with it, as soon as it falls into correct class and performance tier. There should always be flexibility with using some dies that had been overmanufactured or not capable of higher tier performance as originally intended. The same happens in many other industries...
If a shape, size or taste of fresh tomato does not fall into intended retail class, it's packaged into different class, cut into salad, dried or crushed for sauces. Better use than throw away as waste. The same applies to silicon. If only 4 cores work on 8 core chiplet, it should never be thrown away, but used in lower power devices such as NAS, mini-PC, entry notebook/desktop, etc.
- You have the MCP desktop parts skipping 4000-series and 6000-series to adhere to the mobile naming convention, despite the desktop parts not following the mobile naming convention. Why?!
It's becoming more complex. Several MCP desktop parts became mobile CPUs Dragon Range. Should they name Dragon Range SKUs 7000 and then Phoenix 8000? Hell, no. That would be even more confusing. 7000-series are 2022/2023 products on several architectures for many segments.
Series are usually based on time cycles or calendar year, as variety of products are released. Architecture still plays a role as diversity of products and the number of staggered release cycles increase. It's not easy with naming scheme if product/family/architecture cadence does not fall neatly into 12 or 24 month cycles. Intel also released Alder Lake-N series in 2023, in the middle of Raptor Lake generation. This happens.
I actually quite like new naming scheme for 7000, 7020, 7030, 7035, 7035G, 7040, 7040G and 7045 SKUs, as this includes specific architectures to highest possible extent. There will always be one or two odd SKUs that do not fit neatly, but that's fine. The world is not an ideal place.
In 2024, there will be the same situation: 8000 for desktop, 8035 for Rembrandt successor, 8040 for Hawk Point, etc. In January 2025, Hawk Point successor will be called 9040, Strix Sarlak 9050, Fire Range 9055, etc.
7900xtx competes with 3080 not 4080
What kind of nonsense is this dude? Read proper reviews.
Navi 31 is here! The new $999 Radeon RX 7900 XTX in this review is AMD's new flagship card based on the wonderful chiplet technology that made the Ryzen Effect possible. In our testing we can confirm that the new RX 7900 XTX is indeed faster than the GeForce RTX 4080, but only with RT disabled.
www.techpowerup.com
I'm concerned with 8000 series SKUs
Why?