I'd be very surprised if we get TDPs higher than ~125w. Very surprised.
Is that measured pre / post power supply? It makes a lot of difference when you've got effectively fixed power use from RAM, HDD, ODD, various misc board componentry etc.
I'd be very surprised if we get TDPs higher than ~125w. Very surprised.
I know aesthetics play a role. And it is certainly possible to make a beautiful and powerful (and not too loud) machine.
With the 300 mm transition, only a portion of the market could afford the equipment and that equipment's higher throughput meant fewer sales could satisfy the same capacity demands.Ahh, well I guess there does seem to need some behind the scenes massaging and more lucrative profits. However surely with a spate of capital upgrades, the equipment makers ought to come out on top?
I don't know about "just", but it was later than Intel and others. The 300mm transition for AMD was done at the 65nm node several years ago.Did AMD only just transition to 300mm? Wow, I didn't know that! Anyway with oil money behind them, GF ought to be able to make that transition at the same time if they feel it is viable.
Greater variability would push the balance of factors more towards smaller chips with more modest performance targets. This would shift as the process matured.Anyway with greater variability that would mean greater incentive for more smaller chips vs fewer larger chips in terms of getting acceptable yields? So perhaps depending on the size of the chips we might see consoles with a few smaller chips rather than any attempt to amalgamate them into the one or two dice at launch.
If Sony releases a 125W PS4, and MS throws out a 180W Nextbox, the MS console should be significantly more powerful. This ought to be a bigger selling point than "the PS4 is smaller". .
I dont dissagree but to be fair that $1 billion mistake by MS could have been eradicated even at the same TDP with better design and manufacturing, and in sonys case the exotic components like bluray were what pushed them over the 399 mark not just the TDP of the console. .
Is that measured pre / post power supply? It makes a lot of difference when you've got effectively fixed power use from RAM, HDD, ODD, various misc board componentry etc.
Yes but nothing is to say that a TDP of that high needs to have a BOM of 600. .
Not because they care incredibly about the power draw like one would on a handheld or a laptop.
...Not because they care incredibly about the power draw like one would on a handheld or a laptop.
Yes it means higher BOM but they have a set BOM they are building for. Let's say it's 400 at launch once a build a machine in that BOM I don't care if the machine draws 50w or 250w as long as the cooling is speced to handle it sufficiently. It's about bang for my buck and if they get 4x the performance out of the 250w and the final BOMs are 350 for the 50w while the while it's 392 for the 250w. I can tell you they are going to go with the 250w system. Now of course these are random but the BOM is the be all end all not the TDP and they will try to get the most bang from their buck on the BOM.
This is something that always impressed me. Designs of powerful laptops that house tech comparable to the best desktop tech of the time. Granted, it is always scaled back somewhat, but generally 80% +/-5% of the premium desktop tech.
This from a housing that is roughly 1 inch thick.
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High end computers are dissipating 500w or more. The very high end can get up near 1000w. .
Oh I'm fully aware that in most cases TDP is a worst case scenario. There have been some cases where it isn't but AMD I'm pretty sure uses a program known internally as the thermal virus and SPEC tests to find what to set as the TDP.
Do launch / first year buyers really care about power load ? As long as it can be cooled properly I don't really care how much power my console uses. I don't think i'd mind up to 200w or so