adroc_thurston
Diamond Member
- Jul 2, 2023
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I think you're mistaking N2p for 18A-P. Happens.if it is N2P it is launching H2 27.
I think you're mistaking N2p for 18A-P. Happens.if it is N2P it is launching H2 27.
The user he quoted claimed N2P wasn’t launching until 2027. @adroc_thurston was pointing out this is false.Geez, you should at least read the TSMC's transcript before make a mistake correcting someone:
View attachment 123709
Got it?
Geez, second half HVM means the product will be shipping by 2027 is correct...The user he quoted claimed N2P wasn’t launching until 2027. @adroc_thurston was pointing out this is false.
Look at the patten N2 is H2 25 HVM and the product would ship in H2 26 and N2P is H2 26 HVM so it would be at least H2 27 Product shipping to consumer.The user he quoted claimed N2P wasn’t launching until 2027. @adroc_thurston was pointing out this is false.
Look at the patten N2 is H2 25 HVM and the product would ship in H2 26 and N2P is H2 26 HVM so it would be at least H2 27 Product shipping.
Indeed, NVL-S is now an H2'27 product.Look at the patten N2 is H2 25 HVM and the product would ship in H2 26 and N2P is H2 26 HVM so it would be at least H2 27 Product shipping to consumer.
NVL is N2 not N2P 🤣 if we account for Intel time than do it properly it is +++++ years so NVL is 2031 Product such a shame people don't know how accurate Intel is with their '+'.Indeed, NVL-S is now an H2'27 product.
Sorry, H1'28. Forgot to account for Intel time.
Oh really lol? They already Tape Out the A0 on N2 and 18AP.Wrong.
How certain are you? I thought NVL was 2026.Indeed, NVL-S is now an H2'27 product.
Sorry, H1'28. Forgot to account for Intel time.
It's a joke.How certain are you?
Everyone does.They already Tape Out the A0 on N2
Mmmhmmm, Intel seem to be executing on CPUs even worse than AMD have been on gaming GPUs.Sorry, H1'28. Forgot to account for Intel time.
That's a joke.Mmmhmmm, Intel seem to be executing on CPUs even worse than AMD have been on gaming GPUs.
It's like 1Q late.RDNA4 was hella late
They were just waiting until FSR4 is ready.overstock RDNA3 or not
Relative to previous gen -> gen timelines, not whatever arbitrary internal roadmap they have.It's like 1Q late.
Relative to previous gen -> gen timelines, not whatever arbitrary internal roadmap they have.
Considering how far behind nVidia they have been in RT (forget DLSS I couldn't care less about it) they should have just rebranded the RDNA3 hw as lower end 9xxx and shouldered the cost.
Exactly - they can't win so they might as well do it anyway given nVidia does the same thing.THen they'd get crapped on as "Rebrandeon". No win
Doesn't follow that they needed to release it with FSR4 at all.In this case it seems FSR4 wasn't ready. Between releasing it with FSR broken and getting a bad name and delaying it a couple months and getting it right the choice seems obvious
I don't agree with any of your takes in this or the previous few posts. The launch went pretty well. I expect they're happy.Doesn't follow that they needed to release it with FSR4 at all.
FSR2/3 is inferior to DLSS2/3 for sure - but not broken.
The only legitimate reason for the delay in my mind is building up adequate stock that it doesn't become scalper bait automatically, which I can understand them being extremely careful about overdoing, considering the problems they already have with RDNA3 in the channels.
Also given how laughably bad nVidia's RTX 5xxx launch has been thus far I really don't think that it would have made that much of a difference had AMD launched FSR4 later than RDNA4.
You might say that AMD couldn't have known that, but nVidia do seem to have been following a trend of diminishing returns in each new gen in the last few years coupled with their famously cheap stance on RAM, so it's not like the worst parts of this launch were totally unpredictable.
I'd say that nVidia are gonna have to dig deep to win gamers back, but I think at this point either they no longer care because they believe AI revenue matters more, or they just believe their brand is so embedded in the customer base that they will continue to 'upgrade' to these minimal hardware improvements (in raster anyways) despite the price hikes.
I explained my reasoning on this very clearly.I'm going to again remind another poster (you in this case), that AMD or any other company can't base past decisions on our knowledge of the present
Saying you explained it, and then immediately reasoning that AMD should have known the future... if only they could have reasoned it the way you did, it was so obvious...with your current knowledge...of the present.I explained my reasoning on this very clearly.
It didn't require foreknowledge of the future.
Only some bare minimum reasoning of nVidia's business priorities regarding the dGPU market having shifted significantly from 5 years ago, priorities advertised with great frequency from every possible quarter of late.
The problems in nVidia's current launch have precedence in business practices of previous launch years from which to draw reasonable conclusions that do not require the Delphic oracle to resolve from thin air.
They just do it different.Considering how far behind nVidia they have been in RT
the cost of?and shouldered the cost.
AMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.reasoning that AMD should have known the future...
AMD could not have known they'd produce a dud, or not produce enough etc. They couldn't...