The halo laptops are quite expensiveIt is not, the 16C chip is sold about 500$ in the chinese retail market, so OEMs get it for much lower than this.
The halo laptops are quite expensiveIt is not, the 16C chip is sold about 500$ in the chinese retail market, so OEMs get it for much lower than this.
That s not the point, you said that the chip was sold for too much by AMD, the fact that some OEMs are overpricing their products has nothing to do with AMD s pricing.The halo laptops are quite expensive
It's $550 For the Chip which is fine for this silicon considering it's 9950X+4060-4070 Laptop but for us we have to buy Laptops from OEMs unless you are from China also China always get the good stuff.That s not the point, you said that the chip was sold for too much by AMD, the fact that some OEMs are overpricing their products has nothing to do with AMD s pricing.
It's in the name methinks.The halo laptops are quite expensive
The chip is mainly used in often overpriced SFFs, barely in laptops for the time, eventualy there will be a few lauched during the CES.It's $550 For the Chip which is fine for this silicon considering it's 9950X+4060-4070 Laptop but for us we have to buy Laptops from OEMs unless you are from China also China always get the good stuff.
They're priced appropriately. It's in the name.The chip is mainly used in often overpriced SFFs
How do we know it is not 8 wgp ?The way I think AMD views this market, regarding GPU is in Medusa Point:
- those who don't care will be ok with 8 CU (probably clocked faster on N3P)
- those who do care but don't care about power - will get it with dGPU
- those who do care and also care about power - Will get the Halo CPU product
Did I get this right? R9 is basically a 12core CCD with a full R7 SoC serving as IOD?
That appears to be the case, how bizarre.Did I get this right? R9 is basically a 12core CCD with a full R7 SoC serving as IOD?
As for the 8CU iGPU, I guess AMD concluded it's not really worth it to make it larger unless there's LLC or significantly faster RAM.
I am expecting those CUs to clock as high as RDNA4 chips or even higher, though.
That appears to be the case, how bizarre.
Ah, interesting. Is N2 only going to be for the Zen 6C EPYC CCDs?It's N3p.
no it's just for non-poorpeople CPUs.Is N2 only going to be for the Zen 6C EPYC CCDs?
So, 8CU of RDNA4 3.5+ on N3P as opposed to 16cu of RDNA4 3.5 on N4P.It's N3p.
It won't be close but that's by design.it is concerning that it will keep up well enough.
Yeah, this does strike me as a value part. I would ask if Kraken is going to be kept as a long cycle part, but a quick look at Amazon still shows 3xxx parts and a bunch of new built Zen2 laptop parts in the channels, leading me to believe that they are all essentially forever products already.It won't be close but that's by design.
Yeah, this does strike me as a value part. I would ask if Kraken is going to be kept as a long cycle part, but a quick look at Amazon still shows 3xxx parts and a bunch of new built Zen2 laptop parts in the channels, leading me to believe that they are all essentially forever products already.
No idea what that means, but OK.no it's just for non-poorpeople CPUs.
Also, N2p.
It's the subject of some debate.Ah, interesting. Is N2 only going to be for the Zen 6C EPYC CCDs?
it's not a guess.while others are guessing 32.
They're using N2p everywhere except the poverty parts.I am guessing that AMD uses N3P for everything EXCEPT Venice Dense (Zen 6C EPYC).
Everything above mainstream notebook swimlane is some flavour of N2p.No idea what that means, but OK.
N2 is a class, they obviously don't have fully ready N2P right now and even if they did they would not be officially confirming such details so long from release.This says N2