Bigus Dickus
Regular
First, I'm curious about something with the NV30. This has to do with the available die space, and the transistor count of certain features.
NV30 is rumored to have ~120 million transistors, and the 9700 has ~110+ (don't remember reading a definite number there either, just 110+). Let's say, for simplicity, that the difference is 10 million transistors.
My question is probably obvious: how many transistors would an additional 8 TMU's (one extra per pipeline) take (roughly)? Can that be bought for 10 million or less transistors?
Other obvious questions along that line: how expensive will the higher precision pixel shaders (128 bit vs. 96 bit) and more flexible pixel/vertex shaders be in transistor count? Are we talking a few thousand to implement the "advanced" or "beyond DX9" features, or are we talking a few million?
Also, what rumors are there on "videoshader" like capabilities, and integrated RAMDAC's on the NV30? The exclusion of one integrated RAMDAC could buy some die space, as could the exclusion of some of the videoshader-like logic. How much does one RAMDAC cost, approximately?
OK, enough NV30 questions... on to the NV35.
Why is it assumed that the NV35 will be a "refresh" to the NV30 anytime in the near future? I can't help but notice that NVIDIA's historical timing between NVx0 and NVx5 generations is anything but 6 months.
NV10 was the GeForce256. Next was the DDR version, and then we got the NV15 (GF2) a year or so later. The "refresh" was not the NV15 core, but simply the same NV10 core with DDR memory. Before the NV20 core we saw the NV16 (GF2 Ultra and Pro) cores. A ~year later, we get the NV20.
How long did it take to go from NV20 to NV25? Roughly a year. Between the NV20 (GF3) and NV25 (GF4) we got the NV20-Ti core (GF3-Ti). This was the "six-month refresh," not the NV25.
In fact, it looks like we'll get the "refresh" of the intermediate generation (NVx5) well before the NV30 ever arrives (i.e., the NV28, which is analogous to the GF2 Ultra--NV16 core).
This is the way I see things: NVIDIA takes ~2 years between "DX generations" (between NV10, NV20, NV30) and takes ~1 year between new core architectues (NV10 -> NV15 -> NV20 -> NV25 -> NV30), with a "refresh" every six months that consists of faster memory/core speeds.
So I ask again: why is it assumed that the NV35, which historically speaking would be roughly a year behind the NV30, will show up sometime in the first half of next year? At best, I would expect to see a faster core/memory version of the NV30 late next spring (delayed a bit because of the NV30's delay), and the NV35 late next fall.
Will NV suddenly jump a generation, during their most difficult generational step yet? I don't see how that assumption can be made.
NV30 is rumored to have ~120 million transistors, and the 9700 has ~110+ (don't remember reading a definite number there either, just 110+). Let's say, for simplicity, that the difference is 10 million transistors.
My question is probably obvious: how many transistors would an additional 8 TMU's (one extra per pipeline) take (roughly)? Can that be bought for 10 million or less transistors?
Other obvious questions along that line: how expensive will the higher precision pixel shaders (128 bit vs. 96 bit) and more flexible pixel/vertex shaders be in transistor count? Are we talking a few thousand to implement the "advanced" or "beyond DX9" features, or are we talking a few million?
Also, what rumors are there on "videoshader" like capabilities, and integrated RAMDAC's on the NV30? The exclusion of one integrated RAMDAC could buy some die space, as could the exclusion of some of the videoshader-like logic. How much does one RAMDAC cost, approximately?
OK, enough NV30 questions... on to the NV35.
Why is it assumed that the NV35 will be a "refresh" to the NV30 anytime in the near future? I can't help but notice that NVIDIA's historical timing between NVx0 and NVx5 generations is anything but 6 months.
NV10 was the GeForce256. Next was the DDR version, and then we got the NV15 (GF2) a year or so later. The "refresh" was not the NV15 core, but simply the same NV10 core with DDR memory. Before the NV20 core we saw the NV16 (GF2 Ultra and Pro) cores. A ~year later, we get the NV20.
How long did it take to go from NV20 to NV25? Roughly a year. Between the NV20 (GF3) and NV25 (GF4) we got the NV20-Ti core (GF3-Ti). This was the "six-month refresh," not the NV25.
In fact, it looks like we'll get the "refresh" of the intermediate generation (NVx5) well before the NV30 ever arrives (i.e., the NV28, which is analogous to the GF2 Ultra--NV16 core).
This is the way I see things: NVIDIA takes ~2 years between "DX generations" (between NV10, NV20, NV30) and takes ~1 year between new core architectues (NV10 -> NV15 -> NV20 -> NV25 -> NV30), with a "refresh" every six months that consists of faster memory/core speeds.
So I ask again: why is it assumed that the NV35, which historically speaking would be roughly a year behind the NV30, will show up sometime in the first half of next year? At best, I would expect to see a faster core/memory version of the NV30 late next spring (delayed a bit because of the NV30's delay), and the NV35 late next fall.
Will NV suddenly jump a generation, during their most difficult generational step yet? I don't see how that assumption can be made.