Originally posted by: j0j081
Could someone explain what this means in retard terms? Thanks.
Originally posted by: magreen
Originally posted by: j0j081
Could someone explain what this means in retard terms? Thanks.
Sure. The bunny came out of its hole. It looked up and saw a big doggy. The doggy barked at the bunny, and the bunny ran around the tree twice, and only then it ran back into its hole.
DON'T be that bunny!!!
Not a foot-race I'd want my fabless company to be in, and these guys know it, I'm not saying anything here that they haven't already contemplated eons ago.
Originally posted by: apoppin
Not a foot-race I'd want my fabless company to be in, and these guys know it, I'm not saying anything here that they haven't already contemplated eons ago.
Of course they know it; and there are definite advantages to fabless also as AMD considered 'asset lite'
TSMC is a guaranteed fab .. who know what the future will bring.
You are basically saying intel has the "advantage"
- agreed .. but not always the sense ..
a small and more aggressive company needs to think smarter and react faster ,, Nvidia seems to have that over intel, so far
- so much so that intel appears to be 'threatened' and is the one that is filing the lawsuit
Originally posted by: apoppin
we are agreeing?
:Q
Originally posted by: magreen
Another point to add here, idc and apoppin, is that with cellphones and hdtv it was intel trying to expand into a completely or nearly completely separate market. Their core cpu business (no pun intended) was not threatened or related to such ventures.
In the case of Larabee, there is much talk of cpu and gpu merging, and the cpu business changing and that those who don't grasp highly parallel vector processing by the horns will be left out in the cold (though the degree to which this is true is anybody's guess). Hence the amd ati purchase. So intel may see more of a need to get larabee right and have the stamina to see it through to completion, not merely for its own profitability (as the cellphone and hdtv projects were measured), but for the survival of intel's core cpu business.
Originally posted by: Denithor
Yet I still cannot fathom how you can pack enough "GPU" cores onto the CPU along with the x86 cores to come anywhere near challenging a discrete card with 240-800 stream shaders.
I mean, the latest i7 chips are 731M transistors (a good portion of which is cache). Compare that to a GT200 core consisting of 1.4B transistors, the vast majority of which are used for compute power (paraphrased from here).
Am I the only one confused on how exactly Larrabee is going to challenge the behemoth top-tier graphics cards? I understand there will be extremely efficient data transfer from "CPU" cores to "GPU" cores (versus CPU feeding the GPU via PCIe) but I just doubt this will be enough to shift the current paradigm.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: magreen
Another point to add here, idc and apoppin, is that with cellphones and hdtv it was intel trying to expand into a completely or nearly completely separate market. Their core cpu business (no pun intended) was not threatened or related to such ventures.
In the case of Larabee, there is much talk of cpu and gpu merging, and the cpu business changing and that those who don't grasp highly parallel vector processing by the horns will be left out in the cold (though the degree to which this is true is anybody's guess). Hence the amd ati purchase. So intel may see more of a need to get larabee right and have the stamina to see it through to completion, not merely for its own profitability (as the cellphone and hdtv projects were measured), but for the survival of intel's core cpu business.
I find this logic too be most rational and agreeable. NV might fear this much as well, hence the rhetoric Jensen has been firing off for the past year or so.
No one likes a feeling of impending doom, it tends to make one irritable.
Originally posted by: apoppin
i have have a feeling that Nvidia knows that intel is going to fUp Larrabeast
- they broke off negotiations with intel .. perhaps they realize that the intel engineers are way too "CPU oriented" to grasp GPU
Originally posted by: aigomorla
i actually think the oposite.
There scared to shit about larrabe, and hope to get at least a little piece of the pie.
And there was no negotiations, intel just kept saying No, umm no, and definitely No.
Those of you who were in this hobby a long time ago, remember intel had an awesome GPU at its time.
It was called the i740.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel740
i think and still think, intel engineers > nvidia engineers. :T
Originally posted by: waffleironhead
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Only you would consider that atrocious gpu to be "awesome". Thanks for that one I needed a laugh.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
For its time the i740 was a badass card
Originally posted by: magreen
What happened to 3dfx? They were stomping on everyone back then.
3dfx Interactive was a company that specialized in the manufacturing of 3D graphics processing units and, later, graphics cards. It was a pioneer in the field for several years in the late 1990s until 2000 when it underwent one of the most high-profile demises in the history of the PC industry. It was headquartered in San Jose, California until, on the verge of bankruptcy, many of its intellectual assets (and many employees) were acquired by its rival, Nvidia Corporation. 3dfx Interactive filed for bankruptcy on October 15, 2002.[1][2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3Dfx
Thanks. That is sad... and fascinating.Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: magreen
What happened to 3dfx? They were stomping on everyone back then.
3dfx Interactive was a company that specialized in the manufacturing of 3D graphics processing units and, later, graphics cards. It was a pioneer in the field for several years in the late 1990s until 2000 when it underwent one of the most high-profile demises in the history of the PC industry. It was headquartered in San Jose, California until, on the verge of bankruptcy, many of its intellectual assets (and many employees) were acquired by its rival, Nvidia Corporation. 3dfx Interactive filed for bankruptcy on October 15, 2002.[1][2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3Dfx
There is a whole section there dedicated to the "Cause of decline"...it reads like a sad sad story.
Originally posted by: magreen
Thanks. That is sad... and fascinating.
Third, Greg Ballard became CEO of 3dfx in 1997, and analysts marked it as a turning point since Ballard was a marketing guru. However Ballard failed to understand R&D in the graphics industry. Single-card 2D/3D solutions were taking over the market, and although Ballard saw the need and attempted to direct the company there with the Voodoo Banshee and the Voodoo3, both of these cost the company millions in sales and lost market share while diverting vital resources from the Rampage project.[4] Then 3dfx released word in early 1999 that the still-competitive Voodoo2 would only support OpenGL and Glide under Microsoft's Windows 2000 operating system, and not DirectX. Many games were transitioning to DirectX at this point, and the announcement caused many PC gamers ? the core demographic of 3dfx's market ? to switch to Nvidia or ATI offerings for their new machines.