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AMD Hardware Technology

AMD Unveils Carrizo APU With Excavator Core Architecture 114

MojoKid writes: AMD just unveiled new details about their upcoming Carrizo APU architecture. The company is claiming the processor, which is still built on Global Foundries' 28nm 28SHP node like its predecessor, will nonetheless deliver big advances in both performance and efficiency. When it was first announced, AMD detailed support for next generation Radeon Graphics (DX12, Mantle, and Dual Graphics support), H.265 decoding, full HSA 1.0 support, and ARM Trustzone compatibility. But perhaps one of the biggest advantages of Carrizo is the fact that the APU and Southbridge are now incorporated into the same die; not just two separates dies built into and MCM package.

This not only improves performance, but also allows the Southbridge to take advantage of the 28SHP process rather than older, more power-hungry 45nm or 65nm process nodes. In addition, the Excavator cores used in Carrizo have switched from a High Performance Library (HPL) to a High Density Library (HDL) design. This allows for a reduction in the die area taken up by the processing cores (23 percent, according to AMD). This allows Carrizo to pack in 29 percent more transistors (3.1 billion versus 2.3 billion in Kaveri) in a die size that is only marginally larger (250mm2 for Carrizo versus 245mm2 for Kaveri). When all is said and done, AMD is claiming a 5 percent IPC boost for Carrizo and a 40 percent overall reduction in power usage.
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AMD Unveils Carrizo APU With Excavator Core Architecture

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I am intrigued by the potential of HSA, but are there any examples of it in use?

  • I hope they are also (Score:5, Interesting)

    by invictusvoyd ( 3546069 ) on Tuesday February 24, 2015 @09:10PM (#49123859)
    workin on the Linux drivers .. or atleast letting someone else work on them ..
    • by TsuruchiBrian ( 2731979 ) on Tuesday February 24, 2015 @09:23PM (#49123967)

      They seem to be doing a pretty good job on the graphics front. Their open source driver is in better shape and has more momentum than the nvidia open source driver.

      My impression is that Intel has better linux support for their IGP but the performance is about a generation behind.

      • They seem to be doing a pretty good job on the graphics front. Their open source driver is in better shape and has more momentum than the nvidia open source driver.

        And yet neither of the AMD drivers actually have good performance or hardware support.

        My impression is that Intel has better linux support for their IGP but the performance is about a generation behind.

        The support is light-years ahead, unless it's one of the licensed PowerVRs.

        • And yet neither of the AMD drivers actually have good performance or hardware support.

          Good performance compared to what? Intel IGP? nouveau, the proprietary Nvidia binary driver?

          The support is light-years ahead, unless it's one of the licensed PowerVRs.

          So are you agreeing with me?

          • So are you agreeing with me?

            About intel, but not AMD. The AMD drivers are just crap. It's only if you institute artificial restrictions like that drivers must be OSS that AMD even gets a chance to be in the running.

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • I got burned by bad ati drivers a long time ago too. There was a time when I was a "hardcore" nvidia supporter. But I was never so hardcore that my loyalty to one company over another was unconditional. I really do feel like AMD is doing a better job on linux development at the moment, while nvidia is coasting on its past achievements.

        • by aliquis ( 678370 )

          The support is light-years ahead, unless it's one of the licensed PowerVRs.

          Oh trying to decide whatever light-years ahead actually make sense or not when it comes how far one technology is ahead of another one ...

          "This must be what quantum physics is all about!"

      • For the record, AMD is also moving toward a hybrid stack for the Linux drivers:
        - the same opensource kernel driver is used every where.
        - the only difference is that either you run the official catalyst OpenGL implementation from AMD on top of it. Ot the opensource Mesa Gallium3D tracker.
        - same goes for video (either a VA-API implemented by catalyst, or the various Gallium video state tracker).

        So except for the 3D and Video, everything else is opensource and work is shared.
        From the development point of view,

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You do realize that is 4 computers in one box right? Like literally the equivalent of 4 1u servers with 2 CPU and 3 GPU but turned on their side. Also that it costs nearly 100k, which is approximately 50 times as much as an _entire_ computer based on this APU would cost.
      Also, considering that with your computer you are getting 12 cores * 4 machines for $100k, where as with an APU based machine you are getting 4 cores * 50 machines, and each of those cores is clocked about twice as fast (4.3 vs 2.4ghz).

  • not just two separates dies built into and MCM package

    Don't you mean "not just two separates dies built into an MCM package"?

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