Anyone else seen this?
http://techreport.com/discussions.x/20195
I think it's the first time I've seen SP & transistor count for Turks/Caicos (Whistler/Seymour).
Blackcomb: 960SP, 1.7B, 680Mhz
Whistler: 480SP, 715M, 725Mhz
Seymour: 160SP, 370M, 800Mhz
(Mhz calculated from quoted gflops - like usual I don't really expect them to quite hit these in actual notebooks.)
The lineup imho has too many chips however. In particular, Whistler looks like it's a Redwood with Barts tweaks and an additional simd. There's not really that many more transistors compared to that predecessor (+14%) and hence probably die size is quite similar too, so I'm not sure why AMD is promoting that old one to HD6500M series instead of just dropping it - could still sell partially disabled Whistler parts with 400 (or even 320) SPs.
Blackcomb is Barts with 2 SIMDs disabled - interesting that AMD chose not to release a fully enabled part. In any case, it should be quite a beast, beating all currently released chips (including that monster GTX480M with its stellar TDP) easily (no doubt nvidia will counter with a less crippled GF104/GF114 than they currently are offering, or even GF110).
Seymour is the most interesting wrt speculation - the transistor count increase over Cedar is way too big for a simple increase of the simds to 16-wide. So either it just adds 2 more 8-wide simds for a total of four, or there's other changes gobbling up the transistors (could for instance have the faster Redwood/Juniper style frontend, don't forget Cedar was simpler there).
Also, I think it would have been a good opportunity to drop that anemic cedar-based HD6300M. Contrary to the past, I don't think it will be too popular since when equipped with ddr3 it will get beaten by Sandy Bridge IGP. Granted it has dx11 support, better drivers, probably much faster MSAA, better quality AF filter and so on, but that's probably not enough to really be an option instead of the IGP (considering cost and power). With gddr5 it might be faster but I still doubt it's worth it.
Speaking of gddr5, AMD is saying all chips support gddr5 or ddr3. I can only hope noone takes that literally and will offer totally stupid things like HD 6800M with ddr3 (which would likely be slower than HD 6700M with gddr5). That's also something I really wish AMD would finally enforce - products with different ram type (if you REALLY want to offer them) just NEED a different name (the table is only using series names so can't judge that yet but considering the past fearing the worst). Slightly different clocks using the same name might be ok (if that's "slightly"), but not something which changes performance by ~30%.
Edit: why guess if you can look it up...
http://www.amd.com/us/products/note...md-radeon-6400m/Pages/amd-radeon-6400m.aspx#2
So, it looks like Seymour simply extended the 8-wide simds to 16-wide to get twice the SPs compared to Cedar/Park (it still has 8 tmus). Thus I guess it must have faster frontend to account for the huge transistor count increase.