I hope it is 20nm to be honest. Otherwise I'll have to wait even longer to buy a new GPU as I really hate buying GPUs/CPUs to replace existing ones that are on the same process node.
@lanek You have a source for late '16 for TSMC 16nm FF? And, about contracts abandoned and whatnot as well?
Not seen anything about any of this in the tech press I monitor.
This is the first time I've heard of "Arctic Islands."We do not know if the Arctic Islands codename is correct, but if it is, then I hope there is more here than just marketing decision. Will Arctic Islands bring a new quality of cooling solutions to Radeon family?
It originates from SweClockers, they've apparently aquired some new roadmaps from AMD somehow. They've also posted new AMD CPU & APU stuff & schedulesFrom Videocardz: "Radeon Rx 400 series are codenamed Arctic Islands."
This is the first time I've heard of "Arctic Islands."
From Videocardz: "Radeon Rx 400 series are codenamed Arctic Islands."
This is the first time I've heard of "Arctic Islands."
16nm FF from TSMC seems again delayed to late late 2016 ( at best ).
January 16th, 2015 at 12:00 am - Author Anton Shilov
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. has clarified the timeframe when it intends to start mass production of chips using 16nm FinFET fabrication process. The world’s largest contract maker of semiconductors once again will delay 16nm FF volume production by a month or two to the third quarter of 2015.
Back in October, 2014, TSMC already said that it would move mass production of chips using its 16nm FinFET manufacturing technology from early 2015 to Q2 or early Q3 2015. This week the company said that the aforementioned semiconductors will be made only sometimes in the third quarter of the year, which essentially means another delay, albeit, a slight one.
“We plan to mass produce 16nm FinFET [chips] in the third quarter of 2015,” said Lora Ho, senior vice president and chief financial officer of TSMC.
http://www.kitguru.net/components/a...oduction-using-16nm-finfet-process-to-q3-2015
@Alexko
Well, heat is the same as power draw, which, all factors being the same, is the same as performance. So if you want a fast chip, it's going to draw power...
It's just a code name, assuming it's even accurate to begin with. Trolls gonna troll, you know? Not much that can be done about that, heh.
We still don't even know if the r300 series is pirate islands or Caribbean islands or something else entirely...
Considering the power ceiling is the same for all GPU add-in boards, efficiency tends to be roughly similar between manufacturers. Also, high-end board gamers don't really care all that much about efficiency anyhow, they want raw power, and if your product delivers that then they'll buy it. No GPU can be hugely more inefficient than its competitors due to the power ceiling anyway (unless your name's Geforce GTX 4/580 that is... Then you can secretly pull 500W without telling anyone, lol.)All factors being the same, yes, but the key factor is power-efficiency.
For current products, AMD consumes 60% more power for similar performance? (Say, GTX960 vs R9 285). That's not 'roughly similar.' And I'm sure AMD is very hard at work to make that go away. It makes them an impossible choice for laptops.Considering the power ceiling is the same for all GPU add-in boards, efficiency tends to be roughly similar between manufacturers.
That's a different topic. The point is that power efficiency matter a great deal more that you suggested.NV's offerings is for intents and purposes a generation newer than AMD's, so not really a fair comparison.
I think there's 99% of luck, nothig will be in 20nm this year... . so i can imagine, we will only see 28nm (SHP from Samsung Glofo ? ) for the start of 2015. then i can imagine a die shrink is possible.. 16nm FF from TSMC seems again delayed to late late 2016 ( at best ), so maybe, but im really not optimist for that, a die shrink to 14nm FF from Samsung / GlobalFundries at the end of 2015.. early 2016...
Everyone, include Qualcomm have now leave the 16nm FF TSMC boat ( we could rename it Titanic at this point ), it only stay Nvidia on theory for the 16nm FF in TSMC ( by lack of information, we can only conclude their TSMC contract is still alive for 16nm, or maybe not ), all contract have been closed with TSMC and re allocated to Samsung.
No, it most certainly is not. It's a fact of reality. Different generations have different properties, including power efficiency and so on, comparing a newer and an older gen GPU is not going to be entirely accurate. What I said is true, in broad terms, which obviously means taking generational differences into consideration.That's a different topic.
If that's the case, it's a point which you've yet to prove.The point is that power efficiency matter a great deal more that you suggested.