Adry9
Member
I own a 7950, so in the end, I WIN when I upgrade.![]()
7950 here too, can't wait for the new cards to roll.
I own a 7950, so in the end, I WIN when I upgrade.![]()
If this is true (I doubt it is, though), it will be the card for VR.
Weeeeeell... If P10 is Hawaii on 14nm with 256 bit GDDR5X then technically it may somewhat reach Fury's performance if it'll be clocked high and the architectural optimizations will give it some 10-20% on average. Fury is some +10-15% of performance to 390X, not a gap that can't be closed by a better architecture with higher clocks.
Reaching 980Ti is a different matter however, especially if we're assuming that it's factory OC 980Ti cards which it needs to reach.
What I don't buy is the $300 price though. If it'll beat Fiji and they'll price it on $300 then what will they sell between $300 and $1500?
For more than half a year my PC is borked. When start up any game system freezes within minutes and I get all kinds of TDR timeouts all the time. When Polaris gets out, I will upgrade everything, and then... the true winner will be me.I own a 7950, so in the end, I WIN when I upgrade.![]()
We know already that Polaris is not just "old GPU tech brought down to 14nm". AMD changed a bunch of things for this "GCN 4th gen" architecture, optimizing it even more for game rendering.
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We don't know anything. These yellow splashes there don't provide any amount of information.
They provide information that AMD has changed things. We are not getting any of the GCN architectures like on 28nm.
AMD Polaris 10 GPU To Offer Near 980 Ti Performance For 299 USD?
Granted we've heard this before from them but it would cool if this will turn out to be true.
Weeeeeell... If P10 is Hawaii on 14nm with 256 bit GDDR5X then technically it may somewhat reach Fury's performance if it'll be clocked high and the architectural optimizations will give it some 10-20% on average. Fury is some +10-15% of performance to 390X, not a gap that can't be closed by a better architecture with higher clocks.
Reaching 980Ti is a different matter however, especially if we're assuming that it's factory OC 980Ti cards which it needs to reach.
What I don't buy is the $300 price though. If it'll beat Fiji and they'll price it on $300 then what will they sell between $300 and $1500?
7950 here too, can't wait for the new cards to roll.
Remember, the same Polaris 10 GPU chip [although lower clocked, and with 36 active CUs] is inside PS4K APU.This summer we will get tons of Polaris benchmarks, and when they come, we will know for sure what kind of boost will PS4K get over PS4.
We know already that Polaris is not just "old GPU tech brought down to 14nm". AMD changed a bunch of things for this "GCN 4th gen" architecture, optimizing it even more for game rendering.
![]()
For more than half a year my PC is borked. When start up any game system freezes within minutes and I get all kinds of TDR timeouts all the time. When Polaris gets out, I will upgrade everything, and then... the true winner will be me.![]()
We could also do the calculation based on perf/watt.
If 2.5x is true then a 150 watt P10 with 8GB GDDR5 would have similar performance to 375watt Hawaii with 8GB GDDR5. That is in excess of 390X performance and probably on par with Fury X so very near 980Ti performance.
As far as $299 is concerned it does not seem too far fetched. Fury Nano is around $500 and that is a bigger die and uses more expensive HBM. A smaller die with cheaper ram could easily be doable at $299.
This feels very similar to the 4xxx series launch. I remember the disbelief when the 800SP rumours dropped and then even more when the prices were leaked. It was such a bombshell that Nvidia dropped the 280 prices by $150 overnight.
Still I will wait and see. That level of performance seems feasible as does the price but feasible is very far from true.
it will at least be bigger than the changes 1.1 and 1.2 brought. Raja has stated its the biggest change to gcn yet.We don't know anything. These yellow splashes there don't provide any amount of information.
This feels very similar to the 4xxx series launch. I remember the disbelief when the 800SP rumours dropped and then even more when the prices were leaked. It was such a bombshell that Nvidia dropped the 280 prices by $150 overnight.
This feels very similar to the 4xxx series launch. I remember the disbelief when the 800SP rumours dropped and then even more when the prices were leaked. It was such a bombshell that Nvidia dropped the 280 prices by $150 overnight.
I would temper expectations, 4000 series is maybe once in a decade type thing.
We could also do the calculation based on perf/watt.
If 2.5x is true then a 150 watt P10 with 8GB GDDR5 would have similar performance to 375watt Hawaii with 8GB GDDR5. That is in excess of 390X performance and probably on par with Fury X so very near 980Ti performance.
As far as $299 is concerned it does not seem too far fetched. Fury Nano is around $500 and that is a bigger die and uses more expensive HBM. A smaller die with cheaper ram could easily be doable at $299.
This feels very similar to the 4xxx series launch. I remember the disbelief when the 800SP rumours dropped and then even more when the prices were leaked. It was such a bombshell that Nvidia dropped the 280 prices by $150 overnight.
Still I will wait and see. That level of performance seems feasible as does the price but feasible is very far from true.
That's not how perf/watt works usually as the figure provided is for the chip of the same performance, you can't assume that it means that you'll get 2.5x more performance in the same power draw envelope. And the 2.5x figure itself is kinda misleading as they've been switching between 2x and 2.5x and it's not really clear if they're talking about desktop P10 chips or notebook P11 - which may obviously have a better perf/watt due to lower clocking and better sorting.
The best basis for any kind of estimation we have now is the 232mm^2 die size which should put that chip somewhere around Hawaii's complexity. And as I've said, with some enhancements and better clocks a chip of Hawaii complexity could reach Fury's performance levels.
4xxx series was a big architectural change. I'm not expecting anything like that from Polaris.
Roy Taylor:
“If you look at the total install base of a Radeon 290, or a GTX 970 or above [the minimum specs required for VR], it’s around 7.5 million units, but the issue is that if a publisher wants to sell a £40/$50 VR game, there’s not a big enough market to justify that yet. We’ve got to prime the pumps, which means somebody has got to start writing cheques to big games publishers. Or we’ve got to increase the install TAM [total addressable market].”
“The reason Polaris is a big deal, is because I believe we will be able to grow that TAM significantly. I don’t think Nvidia is going to do anything to increase the TAM, because according to everything we’ve seen around Pascal, it’s a high-end part. I don’t know what the price is gonna be, but let’s say it’s as low as £500/$600 and as high as £800/$1000. That price range is not going to expand the TAM for VR. We’re going on the record right now to say Polaris will expand the TAM. Full stop.”
http://videocardz.com/59445/amd-polaris-aiming-at-vr-capable-graphics-cards
So it's confirmed, what we speculated on the last pages.
Polaris will not compete with Nvidia in high-end.
Roy Taylor:
So it's confirmed, what we speculated on the last pages.
Polaris will not compete with Nvidia in high-end.
We knew this from the first moment chip sizes started being rumored.
This summer AMD will launch low [~50W for 1080p gaming] and mid [100-120W for 1440p60 gaming] cards, while Nvidia will immediately start with stronger/bigger chip [~350mm2].
AMDs high end will come out around new year.
I imagine this has been brought up;
https://youtu.be/aSYBO1BrB1I
Had it shown to me. Now I do not understand a lot of what he is saying in the technical sense, but it does sound to be a fairly solid argument towards his case.
Or is this something that we will not notice until Navi is detailed?
Note: Just ignore if this is too OT.
Gemüsepizza;202102123 said:So Vega will compete with a GP100 (HBM2) variant? Welp, good luck with that AMD.
Edit: Seems like a really strange strategy to me. Nvidia will be able to compete with AMD in the mainstream area, because they have products in this range. They just have to price them accordingly. But now AMD can't compete with nvidia in the high-end area, because nvidia will have much faster cards. Also lol at their price predictions. $600 for the cheapest Pascal card? Does he really believe this?
We knew this from the first moment chip sizes started being rumored.
This summer AMD will launch low [~50W for 1080p gaming] and mid [100-120W for 1440p60 gaming] cards, while Nvidia will immediately start with stronger/bigger chip [~350mm2].
AMDs high end will come out around new year.
Gemüsepizza;202102123 said:So Vega will compete with a GP100 (HBM2) variant? Welp, good luck with that AMD.
Edit: Seems like a really strange strategy to me. Nvidia will be able to compete with AMD in the mainstream area, because they have products in this range. They just have to price them accordingly. But now AMD can't compete with nvidia in the high-end area, because nvidia will have much faster cards. Also lol at their price predictions. $600 for the cheapest Pascal card? Does he really believe this?
No, but if the rumoured die sizes for the initial products of each vendor are at all accurate, it would require a colossal blunder for NV not to dominate the high-end.Do you have benchmarks of future products already?
The source article is btw a nice read:
http://arstechnica.co.uk/gadgets/2016/04/amd-focusing-on-vr-mid-range-polaris/
High-end PC market is smaller than I thought to be honest."If you look at the total install base of a Radeon 290, or a GTX 970 or above [the minimum specs required for VR], it's around 7.5 million units,"
No, but if the rumoured die sizes for the initial products of each vendor are at all accurate, it would require a colossal blunder for NV not to dominate the high-end.
(The last time they made such a colossal blunder was with the FX series 13 years ago)
No, but if the rumoured die sizes for the initial products of each vendor are at all accurate, it would require a colossal blunder for NV not to dominate the high-end.
(The last time they made such a colossal blunder was with the FX series 13 years ago)
It depends. Does releasing a big die, high end gpu at 1000 bucks count as "dominate"? Pretty much in the eye of the beholder.
It depends. Does releasing a big die, high end gpu at 1000 bucks count as "dominate"? Pretty much in the eye of the beholder.
Gemüsepizza;202102123 said:So Vega will compete with a GP100 (HBM2) variant? Welp, good luck with that AMD.
Edit: Seems like a really strange strategy to me. Nvidia will be able to compete with AMD in the mainstream area, because they have products in this range. They just have to price them accordingly. But now AMD can't compete with nvidia in the high-end area, because nvidia will have much faster cards. Also lol at their price predictions. $600 for the cheapest Pascal card? Does he really believe this?
It depends. Does releasing a big die, high end gpu at 1000 bucks count as "dominate"? Pretty much in the eye of the beholder.
If vega is meant to compete with gp100 then there will be a massive gap in amd's lineup between polaris 10 and vega
If vega is meant to compete with gp100 then there will be a massive gap in amd's lineup between polaris 10 and vega
It's pretty weird tbh that polaris10 is so small, maybe they'll have some heavily cut version of vega that competes in the midrange with gp10.
I'm hoping they'll deliver beyond our expectations with polaris because it's really bumming me out, if nvidia end up having the performance segment all to themselves then prices are going to suck horribly again.
It almost feels like a repeat of 2012 if this happens (well even worse, as right now it seems likely that gp104 might be as far ahead of polaris10 than gk110 was of tahiti), when amd didn't have anything decent performance wise for ages and prices shot up massively. It took like 2 years for prices to go back down
Or there's a Vega 11 releasing next year with HBM2 and AMD will have a lead. Getting disappointed before seeing benchmarks is not a good idea. You seem to have extremely high expectations of GP104.
Yeah, thought this would be much higher too, especially if it's 970 and 290's combined installbase. In any case, this number only indicates the installbase for entry level GPU's for VR, the combined installbase of fury+980ti won't add too much to that tally, but perhaps take it past 10 million if we're being positive? I agree, still on the low end though. (for an installbase)High-end PC market is smaller than I thought to be honest.
I imagine this has been brought up;
https://youtu.be/aSYBO1BrB1I
Had it shown to me. Now I do not understand a lot of what he is saying in the technical sense, but it does sound to be a fairly solid argument towards his case.
Or is this something that we will not notice until Navi is detailed?
Note: Just ignore if this is too OT.
AMD Radeon R9 M480 based on Polaris 11 GPU
Considering that the mobile parts naming is usually one step above the desktop AMD's lineup that likely means that P11 will be used for R9 470 cards on the destop.
We may very well end up seeing AMD hit the mainstream market to improve "TAM" like Roy said and Nvidia hitting enthusiast market.
So what if the 480X only costs $300. Let's assume for a moment that it can reach about Fury X levels.
Let's then assume the 1070 is $400 and 1080 is $500. What if these chips are +100 and at $500 and $600.
Who comes out on top? This is all pretty crazy.
Right, AMD are being plotted against I'm sure.(and a few Gaffers will work very hard to assure that doesn't happen)
Right, AMD are being plotted against I'm sure.
I definitely prefer Nvidia these last couple years, but don't act like people aren't fanboying.Right, AMD are being plotted against I'm sure.