Quantity doesn't show improvement on the architecture nor the need of a name change and thus the resistance people seem to have with the new name. An increase in number within a 'generation' has the X1800-> X1900 increased the shader count 3 fold, and the transistor count 20%, yet didn't get it's own X2K numbering, but the GF3 -> GF4 is only 10% diff but gets it own generation.
Yes Ati did that previously with the X1800~X1900 series, both used very different architectures and yet both had the same generational numeration, but in that case, the consumer was not mislead, you got a product that didn't improve a performance dramatically from the previous flagship video card, so Ati decided to just go for the X1900 numeration, that was the old Ati, and I preferred that to what they do now.
In this case, you get almost the same GPU from an architectural standpoint (smaller fabrication process, DX10.1 support which is worthless besides being on more bullet point to add to the feature list) but yet, most uninformed consumers will think this is a whole new card because of the next gen denomination (HD3800>HD2900), when in reality, will have about the same performance but a cheaper price point than the "previous gen" card.
This is akin to what nVidia did many years ago with the GeForce 4 MX, which was a GeForce 2 MX with higher clocks and a new name, even though the GeForce 4 Ti series were a lot faster than the MX series and had support for pixel and vertex shaders. Or the same as Ati did when they introduced the 9000 and 9200 series, they only supported DX 8.1 when compared to other fully DX 9 "genuine" R9x00 cards. Or the X600, X300, X700 cards, which used the X denomination but were just PCIe versions of the 9600/9700 series.
Fab process wasn't new, just new to the high end, 130nm and 130nm low-Kd were already used on the R9600P/XT. And for that same reason you could argue the RV670 deserves a name change skipping a node and going from optical shrink to optical shrink, so that's like 2 process changes, and will be the first to be built on the new fab from any IHV. So it kinda proves my point more than dissproves it, although I don't think fab process matters that much so much as the results.
The card that introduced the 9X00 series was the R300 based 9700, not the RV350/360, it has been a common practice in the video card industry for many years for manufacturers to migrate to a smaller fab. process for the mainstream GPU series on any given generation, before using that smaller process for the next gen flagship video cards, just as the HD3800 is a mainstream smaller fab. process version of the HD2900, sorry but this kinda disproves your point in any case...
So the PCX5900 should've been the PCX6800 based on that argument? OR does it matter native/non-native where the GF6800 PCIe (NV45) becomes the GF7800, instead of the later NV47?
I was just using an example of another feature available on the X8x0 series that wasn't available on the R3x0 series (the two architectures you decided to quote), just to prove that all those features combined don't add up to just "some extremely slight tweaks" between both generations...
Only after it's refresh when it became the R480, and actually after it was demoed on X700s before you could even buy X850 master cards. So should the R480 have become the X1800 based on that argument?
BTW, R9700s were doing multi-VPU rendering on E&S SimFusion rigs long before nV even had their new 'SLi' and even before Alienware demoed their ALX, so not sure how relevant multi-vpu support is.
Another feature available for consumers on X8x0 cards first, add it to the feature list that doesn't add up to "some extremely slight tweaks". It doesn't matter if the US government used 4 9800XT cards working in parallel for a flight simulator, or Alienware shows some vaporware, if the consumer cannot have access to that technology with the product it has on it hands at any given moment.
But only about 20% more than the R9800XT core, and the core was slower than the R9600XT. And if it was speedboost alone then the GF5900 -> 6800 jump shouldn't have gotten a generational name change as it went down in speed.
Performance increase doesn't need dramatic architecture changes, the R9800XT offered larger performance differences over the R9700 as did the X1900 offer over the X1800 depending on the game/setttings, but what constitutes a significant enough change.
Once again, Ati introduced the R9x00 series with the R300 based 9700pro, All other R9x00 models (except for the R9000 and the R9200) shared the same basic architecture with different features, clocks and fab. process, that's precisely my point.
The original GF6800 was the NV40, not the NV42 which was the 110nm GF6800 plain 12PS model, and if you don't know what the NV47/48 was in reference to, perhaps you shouldn't bother replying, eh?
So what, I made a mistake because the GF6800GS has an NV42 core, at least I didn't quote two cores that were never available for sale
Nvidia's NV47 never existed
Nvidia has canned NV48
The truth of the matter is AMD can name these cards whatever they want, they could name it Radeon HD4000+ for all I care, but it will always be controversial when you raise the expectations of the consumer, and they pay for something that won't exactly live to what they expected, see what happened to the GeForce 4MX and Radeon 9200 users. :shadedshu