5890 can be expected by June/July. Right.So it's second quarter for the high-end.
AMD should have speed binned mature chips for "5890" by then don't you think?
Quote:
Nvidia plans to launch a 40nm GDDR5 memory-based Fermi-GF100 GPU in March, and will launch a GF104 version in the second quarter to target the high-end market with its GeForce GTX295/285/275/260, the sources pointed out.
Replied post #95 tomsmith:NV对A3的良率还算满意,不比RV870差。TSMC已经收工了,元旦后就会开始量产A3,不会有A4了。
(NV of the A3 yield is regarded as satisfactory, unlike RV870 which is poor. TSMC closed down now, reopens on New Years Day to begin production of A3, unlikely there will be an A4 revision
The above 2 were before the digitimes article appeared.有A4 很正常,量产后,新步进在CPU 常见,在GPU 也不少见. 何况A3 还不够满意
(To have A4 is normal, quantity postnatal(?), new stepping of CPU is common to see, GPU not unusual either. Much less A3 still is not satisactory)
If i was the digitimes editor, i would be double checking the writer's sources that they didnt turn GF100 revision A4 into GF104 somehow.
Folowing up previous chiphell thread, cfcnc #92:
Replied post #95 tomsmith:
The above 2 were before the digitimes article appeared.
So if above is to be believed appears likely they are going ahaead with A3 for a Telsa release, and there is some possibly an A4 for the GeForce products.
Take a look at this. If you honestly believe they just buy cheap PCs and hope for the best you are being naive.
Of course these companies invest a lot of time and money making sure things like network or CPUs don't become a bottleneck or how to build cheap storage systems that are still reliable.
That'd be great. Then ECC drivers for all other graphics cards should be right around the corner.
If i was the digitimes editor, i would be double checking the writer's sources that they didnt turn GF100 revision A4 into GF104 somehow.
Folowing up previous chiphell thread, cfcnc #92:
Replied post #95 tomsmith:
The above 2 were before the digitimes article appeared.
So if above is to be believed appears likely they are going ahaead with A3 for a Telsa release, and there is some possibly an A4 for the GeForce products.
I give up. Used text to speech to speak that A4 cpu/gpu line and doesn't make much sense to me.
As for an A4, I really doubt they will do one. If it went in to the oven today, they will likely get it back in WW03 (counting the first full week as WW01). Give it a week for thumbs up/down, and then production, and you would be seriously hard pressed to make Q1 at all. That and I don't see what an A4 would buy them at this point, the problems seem to be more something you would need a full respin for.
-Charlie
If yield and clocks are really that problematic as you among others tend to indicate and if there's no new process option just around the corner, then Nvidia will have no choice but to go for A4. Firstly, to deliver a possible "Ultra" or 385 model to match a potential HD 5890 due mid-2010 at the latest. Lastly (and alternatively) to deliver on their redudancy strategy, which in contrast to AMD's relies on die revisions and process maturity to exploit a maximum number of fully functional dies from every wafer, whereas AMD has die-space sitting idle even in the fullest-featured SKUs.
I think their facebook page just reiterated that they will "ship" in Q1.
NVIDIA Guys/gals: GF100 is shipping in Q1. We haven't shifted our launch. Q1 is it.
http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=225030055851&id=8409118252Fun Fact of the Week: GF100 can also do 100% of the hardware decode required for Blu-ray 3D playback.
I think (but am not sure) that he implies that if they would go for a respin it would be a full respin. In that case I'd guess that they'd be looking into a Bx whatever rather than "A4".
In any case I don't sense anything reliable yet in the channel whether A3 is good enough to start production or not.
Didn't want to suggest that myself due to ignorance on how feasible it would be but my initial thought when reading the Digitimes piece was that GF104 would essentially be the "refresh" of Fermi/GF100.
Of course, I'd be really interested if somebody could say whether it is feasible within the stated timeframe.
Why?If yield and clocks are really that problematic as you among others tend to indicate and if there's no new process option just around the corner, then Nvidia will have no choice but to go for A4.
Got any examples?
Here's what a Google server looks like - hey, it's a 2 socket box. Of all the companies you mention, Google has by far the cheapest server design philosophy, and none except Amazon (arguably, with ec2) are in the HPC business.
Maybe you should just admit already that you're basically blowing smoke
When was Nocona a state of the art server - half a decade ago?
What makes you think their current servers use the same design.
DK