Well my eye sight is bad, but it almost looks like 2 x 32 lane pci-e ports.
Well if you're counting the number of distinct structures discernable in the die shot, I see 2 x 16. And that's some good core porn too, thanks fellix
Well my eye sight is bad, but it almost looks like 2 x 32 lane pci-e ports.
R800 will be single GPU design and Bulldozer will do reverse hyperthreading.
It's a jokeKinda off topic on this but interseting to see what AMD might have next in line. Kyle at [H] posted this
What in the world is reverse hyperthreading?
multipule cores appearing as one logical core.
Kinda off topic on this but interseting to see what AMD might have next in line. Kyle at [H] posted this
What in the world is reverse hyperthreading?
While shared memory seems increasingly unlikely, someone did mention that in this pic: http://www.ocxtreme.org/opb/hd4850/r700slide.JPG
The GPU-Z shows 1GB of memory being detected. Now obviously that's an ATI PR slide and who knows if they photoshopped anything, but a few tidbits is that the core clocks are still 750 MHz (might be changed soon) and that the memory is showing 1GB.
No idea if GPU-Z actually detects the memory itself or if the memory values are in a database, but I figure that detecting memory is one of the easier things to do.
The case you're discussing with Itanium is actually not unique. Compilers can leverage predicated instructions to unconditionally fold branch outcomes into a single code stream.With speculative execution the processor immediately starts to execute both branches at once. Once the calculated value comes out out of the pipeline it discards one branch and continues with the other without interruption.
It would also be a waste >90% of the time.This obviously uses up considerably more total CPU time, but, if you've got an otherwise single-threaded application it allows you to make use of what would otherwise be an idle second processor core - and the result is that you never experience any pipeline stalls due to branch prediction going wrong (and, effectively, you don't even need any branch prediction hardware any more).
The claim with "Reverse Hyperthreading" was that AMD chips would be able to do the same thing with legacy code without recompiling it. That sounds a lot less likely to me. I'm not sure there's ever been any evidence that "Reverse Hyperthreading" is a real feature, as opposed to one dreamed up in the fevered imaginations of especially rabid AMD fanboys.
The slide is legit.
Kinda off topic on this but interseting to see what AMD might have next in line. Kyle at [H] posted this
What in the world is reverse hyperthreading?
Yeah the slide's legit, I'm just wondering if GPU-Z detecting RAM is actually just GPU-Z looking it up in a database like other things or if it actually is detecting 1GB for that GPU. So either the R700 is 2 x 1 GB or 1GB shared... hm!
LOL, wrong on both accounts. Kyle must have the same AMD sources as Fuad.
I don't think so. Kyle was probably the first to back up, like 6 months ago, the theories about a R700 that was not only a CF on a card. Which now seems extremely likely.
I think that with that post he's hinting to the fact that R800, even if it will be a multi-gpu card, it will be viewed by the system as a single gpu card.