http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061025-8070.htmlHmmm...I don't know what to think about this. Will it get more economical to buy new cpu/gpus more often than just buying new vid cards when needing to upgrade the video side of things?
10/25/2006 1:02:31 PM
I don't get it. So they are basically saying you won't need a video card anymore because dedicated GPU's will be processing the graphics? I don't see any performance benefits. Maybe cost benefits, but that's about it.
10/25/2006 1:36:09 PM
10/25/2006 1:39:55 PM
You don't see the performance benefit of being able to talk in silicon, rather than over a bus?
10/25/2006 1:41:29 PM
10/25/2006 2:25:49 PM
this is kinda old news isn't it?isn't this a major reason why AMD bought ATI in the first place?
10/25/2006 2:49:04 PM
well, i'm going to revisit and expand on that statement.
10/25/2006 3:03:03 PM
^I agree for the most part with what you said, but this isn't coming "full circle".It's more that this the beginning of another consolidation period. With tech you have the cycle of new technology -> expanding size (physically) as it adapts to the existing form factors -> new form factors -> size reduction and consolidation, and loop it.This is much in the same vein as bringing the memory controller on-die, multi-core processors on a single die, and the "all-in-one" chip design trend in general. In another year or two as these really start hitting the mainstream, new tech will hit and start the expansion phase again. The "old" way of CPU video processing really was completely different from what Fusion should be (speculating of course). I think the idea is moving from generic multi-core CPU's to specialized multi-core CPU's. So each core isn't sharing the entire workload, but instead each core is highly specialized to do one sort of common task. Which, if well designed, would make for MUCH larger performance gains in a variety of tasks.
10/25/2006 3:17:33 PM
i like this thread
10/25/2006 6:05:29 PM