how about fusion ???
Fusion is SOI. There's no 28nm SOI@gf.
how about fusion ???
After ~2 yrs of ass kicking, nv won't let AMD have time-to-new-node advantage. Fermi2 will be on 28nm, it is most certainly slotted for 4q10 (ofc, delays are another matter) and it will be >550mm2.
After ~2 yrs of ass kicking, nv won't let AMD have time-to-new-node advantage. Fermi2 will be on 28nm, it is most certainly slotted for 4q10 (ofc, delays are another matter) and it will be >550mm2.
That was the plan for 40nm. We all know how well that turned out...
The strategy was right, the execution....
Well that's the crux of the issue, isn't it? Any plan is only as good as your ability to execute it. And since physical design clearly isn't NVIDIA's strong suit...
My understanding of nv says so. That company is too driven by 'halo'.
ROPs -- why bother keeping such amount of FF hardware anymore?
I would say 2560 ALUs, a perfect fit for 32 SIMD layout.
ROPs -- why bother keeping such amount of FF hardware anymore?
Okay.. Okay.. 40 ROPS then.
Let's try this.. RV970 = 2400SP, 48 ROP 256 Bit, basically 1,5 times Cypress in units yet the underlying architecture will be much better suited for todays workload and it would actually scale better than RV870 because of the improved set-up and Geometry etc.
Still taping out this year (or maybe it already did?!) and appearing near the end of the year, conveniently a bit before Fermi2.
Let's see, new architecture+new process+much better geometry handling+"more suited to modern workloads"=F***mi.
Let's try this.. RV970 = 2400SP, 48 ROP 256 Bit, basically 1,5 times Cypress in units yet the underlying architecture will be much better suited for todays workload and it would actually scale better than RV870 because of the improved set-up and Geometry etc.
Still taping out this year (or maybe it already did?!) and appearing near the end of the year, conveniently a bit before Fermi2.
Not directed at you but sweet irony hm? Up to recently the polymorph engine was a "sw solution" changed to something that was dreadfully overhyped only for unrealistic overtessellated scenarios and now we're looking in our speculations for something that will hypothetically compete with it more adequately?
Let's see the thing first tested by independent sources in real time game scenarios as well as in theoretical synthetics and it'll be easy to see if AMD really needed or will need a more adequate solution then they currently have.
so, whats the best guess on the process of NI? 32nm? or u guy betting on 28, or still 40? cause the roadmap still shows 32nm. how easy is it to change the process size?
so, whats the best guess on the process of NI? 32nm? or u guy betting on 28, or still 40? cause the roadmap still shows 32nm. how easy is it to change the process size?
Honest question: any particular reason why 32 SIMDs would be better than 16 SIMDs?