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Well, logo on the picture points toward 380, not 390.
http://www.techpowerup.com/img/15-04-09/20b.jpg
Presenting the new greatly simplified AMD naming system:The First 9 looks more like an 8 than the second when zoomed in and I highly doubt that it's an R8 380...
No info apart from the pictures, but still can't be that far out now...
http://wccftech.com/xfx-radeon-r9-390-double-dissipation-allegedly-pictured/
The small components (what do you call those? the tiny ones on pcb) next to the cooling plate, for VRAM or whatever it is, don't match the R9 290X DD. There's 2x2 of them in the claimed R9 390 and 2x4 on R9 290X DDPoint one that doesn't match. Taking into account that the "390" card clearly has a VRAM cooling plate (that can also be seen from the 2nd picture) attached and covering some components entirely.
The more I think about it, the more true that seems to be - they're point-versions apart in terms of technology, e.g. 1.0 and 1.1, but calling them 1 and 2 has a warm and fuzzy marketability to it.I think HBM1 and HBM2 are part of the same lineage,
Old threads are so much fun, I get lost in them for hours at a time:and HBM1 did not come out as early as was hoped. GDDR5 was not succeeded by a GDDR6, and it has hit speed grades that were not originally projected and lasted longer than most graphics memory standards did.
We haven't heard about anyone else using HBM1. With seemingly such a short life ahead of it I can't help thinking it'll be AMD only.Lessened enthusiasm and the continued polishing of GDDR5 could have tamped down the upside of the first gen, so we may need to see who else but AMD may adopt it.
It may be more than 0.1, if it turns out that HBM1 is SDR and HBM2 is DDR. That seems like enough of a change for a .5 or more. The legacy mode, if that turns out to be an actual legacy mode, might speak to a planned evolution for the standard. Maybe the original intent was for HBM1 to serve as the initial somewhat-rough effort that would have gone into graphics earlier, and the legacy mode is something to compensate for the time lost.The more I think about it, the more true that seems to be - they're point-versions apart in terms of technology, e.g. 1.0 and 1.1, but calling them 1 and 2 has a warm and fuzzy marketability to it.
Old threads are so much fun, I get lost in them for hours at a time:
Nvidia GT300 core: Speculation
NVidia never did the memory hub. And, Aaron was convinced that GDDR5 would never get to the speeds it's now reached. Differential signalling was the dead-certainty. Did XDR2 ever appear in a product? Dare I utter the word "Rambus"![]()
If the signalling is different, I am not sure how that works unless legacy mode effectively behaves like SDR HBM2.Could we see HBM1 stacks as salvage variants of HBM2? e.g. the stack consists of HBM2 dies, but with large chunks turned off or de-rated, therefore good for only HBM1?
It is DDR. I mean... everyone can visit JEDEC's web site and get a copy of the JESD235 HBM DRAM standard. To me, HBM 1 or 2 is likely just about SK Hynix's own implementation of HBM.It may be more than 0.1, if it turns out that HBM1 is SDR and HBM2 is DDR. That seems like enough of a change for a .5 or more. The legacy mode, if that turns out to be an actual legacy mode, might speak to a planned evolution for the standard. Maybe the original intent was for HBM1 to serve as the initial somewhat-rough effort that would have gone into graphics earlier, and the legacy mode is something to compensate for the time lost.
That's said after giving it a re-read, it feels that HBM2 might be an update to the specification that is still in the standardization pipeline, or either it is a vendor-specific version that is still backward compatible with the "legacy mode" (JESD235). At least I saw no lines about 1KB page size or 64-bit DQ in the document. The webpage of Cadence's HBM Controller IP mentioned pseudo channel mode, though.It is DDR. I mean... everyone can visit JEDEC's web site and get a copy of the JESD235 HBM DRAM standard. To me, HBM 1 or 2 is likely just about SK Hynix's own implementation of HBM.
If both are DDR, then the two gens sound more similar than the marketing revision would imply. The older slides on HBM put the data rate about half of what was planned for HBM2, so I interpreted that gap as being related to a shift there.It is DDR. I mean... everyone can visit JEDEC's web site and get a copy of the JESD235 HBM DRAM standard. To me, HBM 1 or 2 is likely just about SK Hynix's own implementation of HBM.