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austexan
11-18-06, 12:43 PM
http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/11/17/65nm_transition_at_amd/

AMD aims for major 65 nm transition by mid-2007

Wolfgang Gruener

November 17, 2006 16:23



Sunnyvale (CA) - In a briefing with journalists, AMD provided and updated outlook on its future processor and manufacturing plans. The firms 65 nm processors will be introduced in December. The company trails Intel by about 12 months, but AMD believes it will make the jump to a product line that consists mainly of 65 nm CPUs within half a year.

The presentation indicated that a major transition to 65 nm will be occurring during the first and second quarter of next year. No specific processor models have been announced, but industry sources told TG Daily that AMD will be making four 65 nm processors available for vendor order on December 5 of this year: The first processors using the 65 nm "Brisbane" core will be the Athlon 64 X2 versions 4000+, 4400+, 4800+ and 5000+.

Roadmaps seen by TG Daily also indicate that 90 nm processors will be with us for quite a while and not rapidly disappear by mid-2007. Most 90 nm dual-cores and single-cores will remain in production at least until the mid of 2008 and high-end versions of the X2 series, including the upcoming 6000+, 5800+ and 5600+ will only be available in 90 nm throughout the next year. The 5400+ and 5200+ models will get 65 nm companions in Q2 of next year. The perhaps most 65 nm product introduction will be the "Agena" quad-core, which is expected to make its debut in early Q3 2007.

While AMD touts a quick move to 65 nm, the company is about one year behind its rival Intel. Intel is phasing out all remaining 90 nm processors, including the Pentium D 820, some Pentium 4 600-series versions as well as Celeron D processors throughout the first half of 2007 and will begin shipping 45 nm processors in Q4 of next year. AMD said that it has been developing its 45 nm process since the end of 2005 and accelerated its roadmap to introduce first 45 nm processors about 18 months after launching its first 65 nm chips - which would cut the distance to Intel down to about six months.

An area where the company may be able to create a new trend and carve out a leadership position may be stream computing and graphics processor integration. The previously announced "Fusion" processor, due in late 2008 or early 2009 will continue the integration model that AMD initiated with its "Hammer" processor architecture in 1999: Following the integration of the memory controller into the CPU package, the company will be adding a graphics processor.

AMDs vision of the graphics processor in computer platforms

This integration opens up a whole range of new application models - and not necessarily only graphics focused scenarios. While AMD envisions general purpose platforms of Fusion for lower-end and mainstream PCS, Fusion can also use the floating point performance of the GPU to expand into data centric and media centric applications as well as high-end graphics when using multiple GPU cores. More details about Fusion are expected to be unveiled during an analyst event in December.

A first impression of the direction AMD is taking with the graphics processor was given with the introduction of the firm's first "stream processor". Basically a slightly modified Radeon graphics card with R580 processor, the technology looks like a regular graphics card, but integrates 1 GB of memory and is targeted to speed up applications in CAD and CAE, financial analytics, oil and gas exploration, as well as scientific programs such as molecular modeling, math libraries and gene sequencing.

finally!

Mr_LoL
11-20-06, 03:44 AM
So where are the k8l's?

nekrosoft13
11-20-06, 09:22 AM
So where are the k8l's?

In the crapper,

AMD needs allot more then some modded k8s to save them.

Fotis
11-20-06, 09:28 AM
In the crapper,

AMD needs allot more then some modded k8s to save them.
Well Intel did very good with their modded Centrinos(Core Duo2) so I can't see why AMD cant do it either.


Anyway dual/quad core K8Ls are due around July 2007.

SpiffMistroII
11-20-06, 01:37 PM
In the crapper,

AMD needs allot more then some modded k8s to save them.



ever heard of the Intel Pentium M?? I assume not.


ISA additions and extensions:

New instructions LZCNT, POPCNT, EXTRQ/INSERTQ, MOVNTSD/MOVNTSS
Extension to the AMD64 instruction set during 2007; it is unclear whether AMD plans this for Revision G or Revision H chips.
New SIMD instruction set and new, wide SIMD units; in a yet unspecified time frame.
Implementation and possibly adding extensions of SSSE3 (which was called "SSE4" prior to its official name announced) and/or SSE4 , which AMD codenamed SSE4a.

Execution Datapath enhancements:

More aggressive prefetching (16 bytes to 32 bytes)
Out of order loads
128 bit wide Floating point units
Larger Out of Order (OoO) buffers
Greater number of entries in Branch Target Buffer
Probable new additions to micro-ops ROM


Improvements in the Memory Subsystem:


48-bit memory addressing for the address BUS of massive memory subsystems
Simultaneous DDR2, DDR3 support
FB-DIMM support in server processors for Opterons after year 2008
Memory mirroring support and Enhanced RAS
Possible use of an intrim socket dubbed "Socket AM2+" which only supports HT 3.0 and DDR2.
Possible use of new socket (Socket AM3), containing both DDR2 and DDR3 controllers: AM3 chips to be backward compatible with Socket AM2 motherboards; but socket AM2 chips will not be compatible with AM3 motherboards. Recent information indicates that Socket AM3 may not be deployed until AMD's 45nm manufacturing process is ready, due to the anticipated slow adoption of DDR3 (despite both bandwidth and energy efficiency over DDR2);


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_K8L


This CPU arc can almost be called K9.