He said it would be architecturally part way between Fermi and Kepler, and it is.He was right except about a minor detail: the chip architecture?
He said it would be architecturally part way between Fermi and Kepler, and it is.He was right except about a minor detail: the chip architecture?
Is it? Does it have different shader architecture? Different texture units? Different ROP? (By know I must have covered the most important characteristics of a GPU.) Different MC? Different crossbar maybe? (You know, that power hog.) Anything else that defines a GPU architecture that comes to mind?He said it would be architecturally part way between Fermi and Kepler, and it is.
Is it?
These are the OEM GDDR5 specs, which are not necessarily the same like the retail specs.
Chalnoth:
Yields COULD be bad, because some claims/rumors have it that NV is most favored customer at TSMC. If they get more wafer starts than everybody else, a proportionally greater amount of working chips would be the end result...
*Edit: someone added a bigass post in the time it took me to type two sentences.
What is your reason for thinking this, and what is it relative to?It's all very relative, I'm not saying GK104 yields are THAT bad, they are simply bad,
What is your reason for thinking this, and what is it relative to?
The gross margin decline is contributed almost entirely to the yields of 28nm being lower than expected. That is, I guess, unsurprising at this point
That was a quarter before the last one.Sinistar said:To quote your fearless leader
Now can you answer the same question you just asked, why you think otherwise?
To be honest, I have never seen that quote. Can you provide a link?
Jen-Hsun Huang
Yields of 28 are probably the best of any new node that TSMC has ever done. They've done a great job with 28, and I think that it also explains the demand on their 28. It's yielding wonderfully at this point in its ramp. The performance is fabulous. The efficiency, energy efficiency, is terrific. So I think it explains the reason why the demand is so great for this particular node. I think the increased supply will have to come from increased capacity and it's -- we're short now, and every chip that they can come out of their fab is being shipped instantaneously. We've reduced cycle time dramatically between us and our customers, and we're trying to get the products to market as quickly as possible. And so I expect us to be supply constrained from wafers at the wafer level, and we'll continue that way throughout the end of the year.
So from terrible yields, as noted in their conference call in February, to the best yields ever in May.
I think ninelven is right, I should just wait for the next conference call. They can't legally lie as they could in that article linked.
Another 'woodscrew moment' for dear leader. We can't renounce that his biography is full of such moments.
Where is the Big-K woodscrew puppy?
So from terrible yields, as noted in their conference call in February, to the best yields ever in May.
I think ninelven is right, I should just wait for the next conference call. They can't legally lie as they could in that article linked.
Kevin Cassidy - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
Maybe along the lines of the 28-nanometer yield. Have you got categorized what the problem is and is there a fix in place? And also, I just -- if you got all the product you needed, do you know what kind of gross margins would have come in?
Jen-Hsun Huang
There's no particular problem. This is the first major quarter of 28-nanometer shipments. There have been some shipments. There've been some shipments in previous quarters but very, very small. And so for TSMC, this is probably the first large quarter of shipments, and we're going to continue to improve yields from here. So there's nothing particularly wrong. This is just early in the learning cycle of a new node. And so we'll improve it with every single outs [ph]. And also this isn't a problem that we can solve. Everybody's using the same 28-nanometer. And so this affects all of us, anybody who uses 28-nanometer. So I think with everybody ramping production, there's going to be a lot more learning cycles both from us and from other people. But TMSC is in a good place now and we just have to keep improving it.
It's the quarterly results conference call, not just an article in a magazine.Sinistar said:I think ninelven is right, I should just wait for the next conference call. They can't legally lie as they could in that article linked.
So from terrible yields, as noted in their conference call in February, to the best yields ever in May.
I think ninelven is right, I should just wait for the next conference call. They can't legally lie as they could in that article linked.
?A1xLLcqAgt0qc2RyMz0 said:28nm yields are great
The act of knowingly making false statements to investors or the board of directors is a violation of SEC (securities and exchange committee) rules and is a felony under federal law with an average sentence of 5-10 years. That being the case... I think some of you guys should lay off the kool-aid..