I mean, yeah. What's your point?AMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.
I mean, yeah. What's your point?AMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.
No one could have predicted memory fiasco from Samsung. AMD was smart to use more commonly available memoryAMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.
The point is that when we have characters like MLID getting some info, the people working for AMD should have gotten x1000 level of info a LOT earlier.I mean, yeah. What's your point?
Do you mean HBM?No one could have predicted memory fiasco from Samsung.
AMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.
They should have bloody counted on it! Sooner or later Nvidia was bound to slip up and focus on AI was clearly indicating they are very likely to neglect consumer side.
They should be promoting internal people who advocated for more forceful GPU approach - including making big Navi 4 and firing those who were against that.Guess they should be hiring you then with your amazing hindsight abiaility. /s
You don't expect your comp to screw up.AMD employs people who are paid very big $$$ to predict the future, every big company got 'em.
Counted on NV just not executing?They should have bloody counted on it
AMD hates client GFX even harder than Nvidia.Sooner or later Nvidia was bound to slip up and focus on AI was clearly indicating they are very likely to neglect consumer side.
They indeed have it, in GPGPU space.They should be promoting internal people who advocated for more forceful GPU approach
I don't think firing Lisa Su is a good idea.and firing those who were against that.
She should take responsibility for the stupid decision she made, fire those who advised her to not support that idea.I don't think firing Lisa Su is a good idea.
Nvidia was bound to fail at some point - they should have looked for signs of that and be prepared, it's their job!You don't expect your comp to screw up.
It's a big market that can be very profitable if scale is achieved.AMD hates client GFX even harder than Nvidia.
It's a very smart decision. Client gfx is a low margin ghetto.She should take responsibility for the stupid decision she made
Why would they fire good execs?fire those who advised her to not support that idea.
You never bet on that.Nvidia was bound to fail at some point
lolthey should have looked for signs of that and be prepared, it's their job!
Because they are crap execs? They are likely missed one in a lifetime opportunity to turn the tide.Why would they fire good execs?
You watch for signs and prepare, it was their chance and they failed to take full advantage of it.You never bet on that.
Lol.Because they are crap execs?
There is no opportunity to turn any tide.They are likely missed one in a lifetime opportunity to turn the tide.
There never were any signs.You watch for signs and prepare, it was their chance and they failed to take full advantage of it
They should be promoting internal people who advocated for more forceful GPU approach - including making big Navi 4 and firing those who were against that.
Because they are crap execs? They are likely missed one in a lifetime opportunity to turn the tide.
You watch for signs and prepare, it was their chance and they failed to take full advantage of it.
I watched and had normal MLID annoyances like he said somewhere Launching 2027 it is not launching before 2028 with DDR6 His launch date should never be taken seriously 🤣.There was a lot of discussion here, in the Zen 6 thread, about likelihood (inevitability) of moving to all 3D design, where the base CCD is a stacked die.
We had the usual Cassandra's talking about cost, packaging capacity why it can't be done (as if TSMC did not specialize in overcoming these obstacles).
Now, according to the latest MLID leak, it is in fact happening with Zen 7. Base CCD chip will be 3D stacked dies. Tom said caches are moving to a separate die - not sure if L3 but also L2. I would think that if L3 moves completely to a separate die, and perhaps runs at lower clock speed, then L2 can expand on the same dies as cores - but we will see.
It could even be top die being cores, middle die being L2 and bottom die(s) being L3, which would allow AMD to move to 16 core CCD, while staying at the same die sizes.
BTW, good episode to watch, because he has one of my favorite guests, Max from High Yield.
IMO adding a few cycles of load-to-use from stacking is OK for L3, not so much for L2. So...Tom said caches are moving to a separate die - not sure if L3 but also L2.
+4 cycles but 4 times the capacity would be alright.not so much for L2
Indeed.Intel is already doing +3 Cycles but 3 times the capacity but less bandwidth.
I watched and had normal MLID annoyances like he said somewhere Launching 2027 it is not launching before 2028 with DDR6 His launch date should never be taken seriously 🤣.
The only reason I watched it was High Yield and AMD is already doing this with MI300 afaik and Intel with Clearwater Forest.
+4 cycles but 4 times the capacity would be alright.
Cold fusion, so better.Is this like nuclear fusion 🤔
It's not mystical prognostication in business when you base your line of reasoning on what a company has done in any given situation in the past as well as what they are doing in 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.
Blackwells specs are very decent. You'd expect more performance, something went wrong. AMD could not have known they'd produce a dud, or not produce enough etc. They couldn't... unless of course they could see the future, like you.
Perhaps if the 6c parts are 'double pumping' AVX512 execution, but in general the dense parts are designed for that feature to the exclusion of per core perf gains.it's possible the Dense Zen6 parts will be able to match all core frequency of Zen5 non-dense parts
Distance like, doesn't impact cache perf like that.The latencies could reshuffle as a result. L2, for example, could be closer to the cores (just below), which could offset the +4 cycles