FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2008
- Messages
- 26,263 (4.29/day)
- Location
- IA, USA
System Name | BY-2021 |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile) |
Motherboard | MSI B550 Gaming Plus |
Cooling | Scythe Mugen (rev 5) |
Memory | 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI) |
Case | Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+ |
Power Supply | Enermax Platimax 850w |
Mouse | Nixeus REVEL-X |
Keyboard | Tesoro Excalibur |
Software | Windows 10 Home 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare. |
Intel is now at 22nm fabs with an excellent architecture and tons of cash; AMD is now at 32nm (starting to release 28nm products) fabs with a poor architecture and in debt up to their eye balls. You can always tell when a processor manufacturer is desperate because they'll release processors with ridiculous power requirements to bridge the performance gap to the competition.Ford, I remember how long it took them to develop this architecture - 4 years or something? Development hell for certain and likely the reason it came out the way it did, especially with poor managers at the top leading the company. A flawed design that they couldn't let go of and it cost them dear.
While I agree that AMD is probably less likely to catch up with Intel in the real world than winning the national lottery at 13 million to 1, I still think that in principle they could make something competitive in performance with Intel, if they had the right leadership in place. That's why I said about taking a leaf from Intel's book to keep development costs down while being careful to avoid a patent lawsuit. Probably just getting rid of that stupid siamese core would do it. I seem to remember that their old Phenom processors still offer good performance today and that they even beat Bulldozer in certain benchmarks. I imagine that refining the Phenom design could really help them put out a decent processor.
Note that by "competitive", I don't mean that it necessarily has to beat Intel, just offer really good performance, coming close to their products in each price range and put the hurt on Intel. Just look at what they did with their latest graphics cards: slap a decent cooler on them and they're an absolute corker! It's certainly not a one horse race in the graphics market which is as it should be.
AMD could have a revolution like they did with Athlon and again with Athlon 64 but it is extremely doubtful. Even if they did, they still have that expensive fabrication gap to bridge. As long as Intel has the best fabs, AMD can't compete in performance.
AMD and Intel settled their x86-related patents a while back and it is not likely to resurface. AMD doesn't have the funds to wage an extended legal battle with Intel and Intel has no intention of running AMD out of town otherwise the anti-trust lawyers are going to be hounding them again.
AMD can't afford the rapid R&D schedules Intel adapted. That's largely why it split off Global Foundaries so AMD only has to focus on architectural R&D. Even then, AMD still can't compete with Intel's many architecture design firms around the world.
Phenom was an incremental update to the K10 architecture. It's been completely abandoned for the Bulldozer architecture because it hit many design walls.
The reason why graphics cards are pretty even field is because TMSC manufacturers AMD and NVIDIA GPUs. Neither have a fab advantage. The Intel head hanchos haven't been convinced to give Larrabee Intel's best fabs either so they're not using their capital to get an advantage. That could change in the future but seeing as graphics cards sales in general have been in decline, Intel is likely to stay out of the DX/OGL discreet market.