You want a "personal" note from AMD?I love how the GPU name is now "confirmed" by a rumor
I love how the GPU name is now "confirmed" by a rumor
We have got our hands on every specification from the 300 series. Unfortunately, nothing yet on the Fury cards. We'll be uploading some images as well in a few minutes.
MSI is launching the following models:
- R7 360 2GD5
- R7 370 2GD5T
- R7 370 Gaming (2 GB and 4 GB)
- R9 380 2GD5T
- R9 380 Gaming (2GB and 4 GB)
- R9 390 Gaming
- R9 390X Gaming
What the hell, the 390 and 390X have the same amount of stream processors and there's a 1000+ processor gap between the 390 and 380?! If this is true AMD just made their own 390x irrelevant, and is not bothering to launch a mid-high end card :/
The 290x was always a card that provided less bang for buck than 290. This was exactly the same as the 7970 and the 7950. Nvidia typically (before the 980Ti) was the one that spaced out the top end card and the next best.
The 390 is probably a lower binned part, with less overclocking room and higher power consumption.
We have got our hands on every specification from the 300 series. Unfortunately, nothing yet on the Fury cards. We'll be uploading some images as well in a few minutes.
MSI is launching the following models:
- R7 360 2GD5
- R7 370 2GD5T
- R7 370 Gaming (2 GB and 4 GB)
- R9 380 2GD5T
- R9 380 Gaming (2GB and 4 GB)
- R9 390 Gaming
- R9 390X Gaming
What the hell, the 390 and 390X have the same amount of stream processors and there's a 1000+ processor gap between the 390 and 380?! If this is true AMD just made their own 390x irrelevant, and is not bothering to launch a mid-high end card :/
There's no incentive to buy the 390X over the 390 if this is true. They are identical, save for a 40Mhz drop in clock speeds. You could OC that back to 390X levels oñ even the crappiest overclockers :/ Power consumption difference must be massive...
We have got our hands on every specification from the 300 series. Unfortunately, nothing yet on the Fury cards. We'll be uploading some images as well in a few minutes.
Well, I was waiting on some kind of leaked benchmark or really anything that showed that the Fury was substantially better than the 980ti but the silence was too much. For me the onus was on AMD to convince me to skip the 980ti but they just couldn't.
Interesting that none of the codenames are the same as 2xx series.
- R7 360 - Tobago
- R7 370 - Trinidad
- R9 380 - Antigua
- R9 390(x) - Grenada
Well, they have to update *something* in these GPUs.
So you bought a card based on silence? I'm not saying the 980Ti is a bad card, far from it (I might end up with one myself) but it at least makes sense to see the full spectrum of offerings and pricepoints before making a purchase. If the leaks are true about benchmarks being available in about 10 days then we will very soon have all the information we need to actually make an informed decision.
That being said, I'm sure you will enjoy the 980Ti!
The number of shaders in the 360 is the same as the 260 (non-X), the 370 has the same amount as the 270, the 380 seems to be Tonga, while all flavours of 390 have the same number of shaders as the 290X. All the parts seem to have been upclocked (noticeably in 390's case).Interesting that none of the codenames are the same as 2xx series.
- R7 360 - Tobago
- R7 370 - Trinidad
- R9 380 - Antigua
- R9 390(x) - Grenada
The number of shaders in the 360 is the same as the 260 (non-X), the 370 has the same amount as the 270, the 380 seems to be Tonga, while all flavours of 390 have the same number of shaders as the 290X. All the parts seem to have been upclocked (noticeably in 390's case).
I sure as heck hope so. While reusing the 260 with an upclock wouldn't be that bad, trotting out the same old tired 7870 with a fresh coat of paint is rather poor showing. Yes, the part probably costs pennies at this point, but GCN 1.0 is quite obsolescent by now, if not outright power-wise, then definitely in terms of feature set.sure. They're probably very similar but possibly with an upgrade to GCN 1.2. We could probably say more if we knew the die sizes. Tonga notably had a larger die than the gpu it was replacing.
Yeah, it's all because the node shrink took so long. We've been stuck on 28nm GPU for far too long!
Plus GCN 2.0 (Or whatever the new arch. will be called) is due by then as well - and along with Cannonlake (or Zen) alongside DDR4 will make a great match - Skylake isn't going to be the game changer we were looking for.
Not long to go to see if the Fury X is going to beat the 980Ti.
That will be a nice price if it's faster than the GTX980 in virtually every scenario. The 8GB is really nice too.We have updated the link with pictures of all cards from MSI.
We also have the suggested prices, but that's for Brazil... And you know how things go around here:
- R7 370 2GD5T OC - R$ 970 (~US$ 311)
- R7 370 GAMING 2G - R$ 1.050 (~US$ 338)
- R9 380 2GD5T OC - R$ 1.300 (~US$ 417)
- R9 380 GAMING 2G - R$ 1.360 (~US$ 437)
- R9 380 GAMING 4G - R$ 1.470 (~US$ 472)
- R9 390X GAMING 8G - R$ 2.600 (~US$ 836)
In the United States the R9 390X should cost somewhere between US$ 389 and US$ 429, if this report is correct
Yes, it seems to have gone down across the board. The 260 has a 95-watt TDP while the 360 is rated for 83 watts, with double the VRAM.Did I read right or has the amount of power draw gone done on the cards? the 380 only draws 150w now, and the 390 draws 208w according to the spec sheet.
Yeah, same here. My case is a little different since DVI is an absolute must have for me, but AMD sure didn't make it a tougher choice for me to buy a 980ti. Stupid 7 second teasers of a video card render don't do it for me, sorry.AMD doesn't have the luxury of making me wait 10 days. If they had anything at computex I probably would've waited but nope, there was nothing. NVIDIA had the 980ti ready and you were able to get reference cards almost immediately.
I thought the 390X was supposed to be 4096 SPs?
We have updated the link with pictures of all cards from MSI.
We also have the suggested prices, but that's for Brazil... And you know how things go around here:
- R7 370 2GD5T OC - R$ 970 (~US$ 311)
- R7 370 GAMING 2G - R$ 1.050 (~US$ 338)
- R9 380 2GD5T OC - R$ 1.300 (~US$ 417)
- R9 380 GAMING 2G - R$ 1.360 (~US$ 437)
- R9 380 GAMING 4G - R$ 1.470 (~US$ 472)
- R9 390X GAMING 8G - R$ 2.600 (~US$ 836)
In the United States the R9 390X should cost somewhere between US$ 389 and US$ 429, if this report is correct
Interesting that none of the codenames are the same as 2xx series.
- R7 360 - Tobago
- R7 370 - Trinidad
- R9 380 - Antigua
- R9 390(x) - Grenada
There's no incentive to buy the 390X over the 390 if this is true. They are identical, save for a 40Mhz drop in clock speeds. You could OC that back to 390X levels oñ even the crappiest overclockers :/ Power consumption difference must be massive...
There's no incentive to buy the 390X over the 390 if this is true. They are identical, save for a 40Mhz drop in clock speeds. You could OC that back to 390X levels oñ even the crappiest overclockers :/ Power consumption difference must be massive...
At least it suggests something beyond a simple rebrand or respin (for ex. 7970GE Tahiti XT to 280x Tahiti XTX). We'll see if it is just marketing however...
Not really. They've already renamed Pitcairn to Curaçao once with no other changes.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6QdnMAfYHIQ
The guy in the video doesn't know that the AMD cards sync through the PCIE connection now. (No bridge required for crossfire)
that dude is misinformed about everything in general.
lol, yeah... surprised someone so uniformed goes out and blind buys a $450 card that has no reviews yet.
Then again, it is quite popular to rag on anyone who buys an AMD product.
I think it has been popular since the dawn of the internet to rag on uninformed posters that seem to know very little, he seems convinced he is buying a 4096 SP card but knows little else beyond that. He is definitely not a regular buyer of AMD graphics cards...
I'm pretty sure he's doing it because he's just as curious as everybody else. I know I would not mind buying it to post about it for curiosity.
Then again, it is quite popular to rag on anyone who buys an AMD product.
Keep in mind that at one point AMD and NVidia counted their processing units different before Kepler. So the CUDA cores count numbers were drastically different from AMDs stream processor count.