Er... no. Moving to a smaller process does nothing to transistor count except transistors per unit area, not "you can magically combine multiple transistors into one single one."If RV670 will have ~800 Million transistors on 55nm tech; that means, if it was still build on 80nm instead 55nm, then transistors count would be magnificently higher then ~800 million. I believe RV670 will have some kind major improvement over R600 including performance.
Your assumption that few customers care about HD video acceleration is wrong.
Your assumption that few customers care about HD video acceleration is wrong.
The main problem is: R600's filtering quality can be as good as G80's
Er... no. Moving to a smaller process does nothing to transistor count except transistors per unit area, not "you can magically combine multiple transistors into one single one."
G71 isn't simply a shrunken G70. At 278M transistors compared to its 302M transistor parent ASIC, NVIDIA lose the transistors via the shrink to 90nm (new libraries) and a slight repipelining of the vertex and fragment hardware, trimming the fat from those.
Also, only OEM machines with ATI I've seen around here are those in supermarkets like Aldi standing next to vegetables on a big pile. Dell, HP etc. barely have any ATI cards in them as of right now.
Er... no. Moving to a smaller process does nothing to transistor count except transistors per unit area, not "you can magically combine multiple transistors into one single one."
That's always been something I've wondered. Yes, logic says you can't emit a transistor when shrinking a design, but...
...but I still wonder how G71 has 25M less transistors than G70.
Rys says:
It could have been optimizations that they could have done
And what tests have you run?
The transistor count between processes doesn't change. The die size shrinks going from 80nm to 55nm due to smaller transistors. I think you're confusing die size and transistor count.If RV670 will have ~800 Million transistors on 55nm tech; that means, if it was still build on 80nm instead 55nm, then transistors count would be magnificently higher then ~800 million. I believe RV670 will have some kind major improvement over R600 including performance.
The transistor count between processes doesn't change. The die size shrinks going from 80nm to 55nm due to smaller transistors. I think you're confusing die size and transistor count.
That doesn't isolate any single element. To understand if the shader organization and compiler are not "effective" or have "bad utilization" you need to isolate exactly what is run on the on the shaders post compilation.Just look at the results in any common real-life game benchmark.
I think its more sensible to consider the ratios in terms of texture quads to pixel quads.My bad. It's pretty clear what you were saying. Anyway, in light of the move to scalar ops, shouldn't we be saying R600 has a 20:1 ALU:TEX ratio? G92 has a 5:1 ALU:TEX ratio.
If no customers care about it then why the FUD from the competition in the first place?I have deja-vu.
Similar happend with hd2600, ATi try to hide the facts the card performance in games not competative and hype a future what very low percent of the customers care.
Here are a few examples from the likes of Dell, Apple, Gateway, that are already shipping.Where are those contracts? Any links? I'm just curious cause I've seen none yet.
Tim gave the same explanation in different words, but I will try again. A smaller process implies smaller transistors. This means you can fit more transistors in the same area. Say you have a 15mm x 15mm chip. At 80nm this chip has 600 million transistors. At 55nm this chip could have 700 million transistors and still be 15mm x 15mm.Did not quite get it; sorry for my lack of knowledge, could you explain in other words please.
Tim gave the same explanation in different words, but I will try again. A smaller process implies smaller transistors. This means you can fit more transistors in the same area. Say you have a 15mm x 15mm chip. At 80nm this chip has 600 million transistors. At 55nm this chip could have 700 million transistors and still be 15mm x 15mm.
Note that the numbers I chose are purely arbitrary and I didn't even both with math to adjust for the theoretical scaling factor. The important thing is the smaller process fits more transistors into the same area.
I think I almost got it. But one more question? Why do you think if it's true that RV670 will have more transistors on 55nm vs. R600 on 80nm.
Edit: Or is it because ATI did not had enough transistors on 80nm tech to fit extra features, but only was possible on smaller process which ATI will use 55nm.
Yes, ATI didn't have "room" for UVD in 80 nm. No, RV670 doen't have more transistors than R600, it has less.Why do you think if it's true that RV670 will have more transistors on 55nm vs. R600 on 80nm. Edit: Or is it because ATI did not had enough transistors on 80nm tech to fit extra features, but only was possible on smaller process which ATI will use 55nm.
Yes, ATI didn't have "room" for UVD in 80 nm. No, RV670 doen't have more transistors than R600, it has less.