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AMD Reveals New Mobile Technologies
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Fri May 18, 2007 04:11 AM
from the speedy-names-for-on-the-go dept.
from the speedy-names-for-on-the-go dept.
MojoKid writes "AMD disclosed a few details today regarding their upcoming mobile platform
technologies,
codenamed 'Griffin' and 'Puma'. According to AMD, Griffin will be
manufactured at 65nm and it will feature a new mobile optimized on-die
Northbridge with a power optimized DDR2 memory controller, HyperTransport 3
connectivity, and larger L2 caches than current designs. The new memory controller should also extend battery
life thanks to new power saving features, that allow the controller to operate
on a separate power plane and at a lower voltage than the execution cores."
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hmm (Score:3, Informative)
Re:hmm (Score:5, Funny)
"Design by current":
1. Put a block of silicon somewhere
2. Apply enough current to make it melt *in an interesting way* (sparks flying etc)
3. Test it's input/output behaviour.
4. ???
5. New x86-compatible CPU
Lather, rinse, repeat steps 1-4 until you get to step 5.
Parent
Low power AMD platform needed (Score:5, Insightful)
What surprises me is why AMD is not putting in more efforts in making better mobile chips and platforms, when this is the one segment that is truly growing at a compounded rate. Heck, Centrino (and P-M) was the one and only reason that Intel managed to make a profit in the inglorious P4 days. One clear use case that I see is in corporations transitioning from desktops to laptops is simply "work-life balance". With the crazy hours that people are working nowadays, and the fact that broadband has become affordable, this will be the one carrot that more and more companies will dangle to keep their employees reasonably happy. Furthermore, as computers become commodities, people will increasingly look at differentiators such as mobility, ease of use, and connectivity instead of flexibility which was the desktop's forte. The only way in which this can truly happen though is if laptop prices start matching desktops in price and to some extent, in performance. In fact, performance is increasingly becoming irrelevant as most dual-cores and quad-cores are overkill for most users, even your so-called "power" users. Except for some niche areas like CAD or image processing, I have yet to see users complain because they are bottlenecked by their processor. Most users do get bottlenecked by their RAM or battery life (in case of laptops) though.
Parent
Re:Low power AMD platform needed (Score:4, Insightful)
You must be new to this planet.
Parent
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I have all this new processing power and memory, and it comes on a computer with Vista, that uses more processing power and memory to do about the same thing. What have I gained?
However, when I removed Vista and put my old trusty WinXP Pro SP2 on that same computer, I saw a real gain in performance. I would lo
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And what exactly are the "new technologies" that Vista is taking advantage of that can't be used in WinXP? And don't give me "DirectX10" because I don't believe for a second that the "new technologies" in DirectX10 couldn't be used somehow in WinXP.
And does it really count when the "new technology" that your latest, greatest operating system is taking advantage of is a "new technology" that the developer of the OS has release
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I don't have time to replicate the research (there is a quite-antiquated comment here on slashdot that I will probably never see again in which I did this with sources) but at one point the non-mobile Opteron plus the chipset had a lower idle power consumption and about the same peak power consumption as a top-speed Pentium M with the chipset.
AMD figured out the low-power thing before in
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Yay!!! AMD has a new product line for the mobile PC market.
Only problem is, they have so frickin many platforms that you spend forever trying to figure out WTF you want in a CPU. Sorry AMD, but I think you jumped the shark tank on this one and long before this too.
Would have been a lot easier if you had stuck to three basic cores:
It coul
SFF PCs? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Last time I checked, non apple h264 blew pretty hard (I'm looking at you, VLC (and others)),
Really? On my old G4 Powerbook (1.5GHz), VLC could play back 1080p H.264 from the Apple trailers web site (with CPU usage at over 90%), but Quicktime dropped frames. On my new Core 2 machine both can play 1080p back just fine with under 50% CPU utilisation. It's the main thing that makes me realise just how much faster the new machine is than the old; pretty much everything else is disk speed limited these days.
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I concluded that there aren't any products out there that do what I want, so I'm not going to buy any, which is fine by me.
Another route that you could take would be to get either a mini, or a slim linux box (if VLC's quality doesn't bother you) as your set top box, and
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Assuming that the new "Griffin" processor is anything like the old Turions then there should be nothing stopping you building a media PC around the new technology. I'm currently in the process of building a media PC myself around a Turion MT37 (2GHz Athlon 64 with 1MB cache) that used to live in an old laptop.
And what about PC-on-a-chip? (Score:5, Interesting)
Now with ATI they should have all the required components for that (good graphics controller etc).
I am thinking ultra ultra portable =)
Re:And what about PC-on-a-chip? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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However, I doubt that AMD would make SOI chipsets and GPUs in-house for some time because they can't swing the investmen
Re:And what about PC-on-a-chip? (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
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Low power, excellent ... now on graphics please (Score:5, Informative)
That's "not good", to put it mildly. If you extrapolate the power consumptions of graphics cards over the last decade or more into the future, it rapidly takes us into the realms of impossibility, except for those interested in Freon cooling and running their own power station in the back garden.
Something's got to change, and it has to be rather fundamental. Just decreasing die feature sizes has held back the rate of power consumption increases considerably, but that regular improvement is already factored in to this very bad upward curve we're on. We need something as dramatic as the change from MOS to CMOS was back in the day, which dropped consumption by orders of magnitude. If something like that doesn't happen, we're in big trouble.
AMD's work on decreasing power consumption is great (and so is Intel's), but please focus your ex-ATI team's efforts on reducing the power guzzling on *graphics*. That's where the major problem for the future lies at the moment.
Re:Low power, excellent ... now on graphics please (Score:4, Insightful)
Daddy? Why did all the energy get used up and the planet die?
Well son, we umm, liked to play a lot of games.
Parent
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A big question is how much power the GPU takes, but also how much power it takes to drive 512 megs and 1 gig of memory on the video cards. Would it save power if we plugged the GPU i
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Tom
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All that said, an external memory bank to the card would make upgrades a lot nicer. Need another 256mb of graphics memory? Just slot it in!
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High end graphics cards have never been terribly friendly to power supplies. I see no reason to think the 2600 or 2400 cards - which have significantly fewer stream processors and are fabbed at 65nm instead of 80nm - will have unreasonable power draw.
The much more important issue for DAAMIT at t
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Documenting their hardware has nothing to do with "giving stuff away for free". Their video cards cost quite a bit of money, and AMD is losing sales every day to Intel because they won't release the docs to let people use their hardware. That's both video card *and* processor sales, because Intel graphics only come with Intel processors.
Releasing programming documentation for hardware is pretty normal. In fact, high e
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AMD doesn't provide clean avenues for contact on this sort of thing. There are only three types of action I could take to get them to listen:
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GPUs are still going insane because volume customers don't buy them. And the people who do, frequently go for 'fastest' above all other considerations.
You'll start to see reasonable GPUs when the GPU/CPU combined cores start shipping, the installed base for GPUs starts to grow past enthusiasts,
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High end cards will always draw much power because pro gamerz will tolerate this sort of thing (remember Voodoo, with external power supplies?). Most consumers will want to stay in the mid to high-end and upgrade frequently. Today this suffices for decent game performance (OK, you don't really
Red vs Blue, S01E02 said it best... (Score:5, Funny)
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Uhh
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I would like to see AMD work on audio technology as something to add. I still miss the old days of NVIDIA's Soundstorm.
Weight and battery life (Score:3, Interesting)
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AMD is already shipping 65nm Athlons (Score:2)