More AMD Demos and Future Roadmap

One thing we didn’t see at AMD is Bulldozer, the CPU architecture intended to bridge the gap between the current K10.5 solutions and Intel’s Nehalem and Sandy Bridge offerings. We’ve discussed some of the specifics of Bulldozer in the past, but we still don’t have anything concrete to report in terms of performance. GF reports that 32nm production of Orochi is going well, and Bulldozer will show up later this year, but there was no hands-on time with BD at CES to report on. Estimates however are that it should provide a drop-in replacement on existing AMD servers that should boost performance by around 50%. If the desktop processors can get a similar performance boost, that ought to put Bulldozer into close competition with Sandy Bridge, and there’s no doubt that a 500GFLOPS GPU core (i.e. something similar to the HD 5600 series) will put paid to Intel’s HD Graphics 3000.

Also present was a single "Llano-like" laptop, but it was only used for a software demonstration from another company. That demonstration consisted of a 3D camera and video camera recording a scene, similar to the Xbox Kinect. The difference here is that the Presentation demo used OpenCL code to process the video signal, analyze the 3D information, and remove the background from the video stream in real time. The result was a sort of blue-screen effect without the use of a blue screen, and the software additionally interacted with a PowerPoint presentation to integrate the presenter with the content—useful for putting the human element into a webcast. The resolution of the 3D signal was such that the outline of the human was a little fuzzy, and the demonstration still tells us very little about Llano performance, but it was still a cool demo.

Brazos is certainly showing uptake at the show, and netbooks should become quite a bit more capable thanks to the design. Going forward, AMD has the Trinity APU that will meld 2-4 Bulldozer cores with a fast GPU core, providing even better performance and flexibility. Where the “Stars” CPUs releasing this year and the Trinity core next year will both use 32nm process technology, it’s interesting that AMD is using 40nm TSMC for production of the Brazos core right now. (This apparently is due to the amount of IP that AMD already has with 40nm GPUs.) Next year, Krishna and Wichita will drop 1-4 Bobcat cores into an APU, and they’ll make the shift to 28nm. We suspect that these chips will shift over to GlobalFoundries 28nm node, though it’s possible AMD could source such chips from both TSMC and GF. Also coming at the top of the CPU performance pile are Zambezi (4-8 Bulldozer cores), roughly in the middle of 2011. That will be followed by Komodo, sporting a full eight Bulldozer cores; neither offering will include an IGP, on the assumption that these high-end CPUs will be paired with discrete GPUs.

AMD Meetings: APUs Make a Big Splash (Belatedly) Examining AMD’s Mobility 6000M
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  • tipoo - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Now that is a rather amazing concept. Quantum physics is always good for a mindf***, lol.
  • marraco - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    (For the record: strictly speaking any transistor is a quantum device)
  • vol7ron - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    I think all this talk is reinforcing the amount of research done in creating a working/useful quantum computer:

    http://www.dailytech.com/Researchers+Create+Seven+...

    http://www.dailytech.com/Researchers+Claim+First+R...
  • medi01 - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Doesn't atom size depend on the material? ;)
  • Stuka87 - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Well, the mass certainly depends on the material, but mass does not necessarily equate to size.
  • techworm - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    you are not right about desktop bulldozer .according to the last amd roadmap 8 core zambezi cpu will ship in early q2 probably april and not 2012! as you said
  • Abwx - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Hey, buy a SB instead, why waiting for a processor due next year?....
    It s somewhat what is underlying in this repôrt...
  • Shadowmaster625 - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Uh because SB costs $400+ for an overclockable cpu and motherboard. Duh. I love it when people say just spend more money on a cpu/motherboard than you were planning on spending on an entire pc! This is especially true in the notebook space. "Just buy a ULV SB and it will pwn brazos and last 8 hours." Well yeah, and the damn chip will cost more than the entire netbook. Duh.
  • silverblue - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    Didn't someone once say that AMD was skipping 32nm entirely to focus on producing at 28nm? Looks like they've changed their mind; perhaps 32nm is proving better than they expected (so they've likely got some refined Bulldozer silicon already).
  • Abwx - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    32nm is the next step, and contrary to Anandtech dodgy informations,
    Bulldozer is scheduled for end april/ early may...

    http://forum.hardware.fr/hfr/Hardware/Processeur/u...

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