Monday, November 21st 2011

Noises About Radeon HD 7900 Series with XDR2 Memory Grow

As early as in September, we heard reports of AMD toying with Rambus XDR2 memory on its next generation of high-performance GPUs. Apart from our own community's response, that news met with a wall of skepticism as it was deficient in plausibility. New reports from Chinese websites have raised the topic again with fresh rumors that AMD will attempt to implement XDR2 on some of its next-generation ultra-high end products after all. XDR2, according to Rambus, can transport twice the amount of data per clock as GDDR5.

Apparently AMD and Rambus have had much more cordial relations with each other, than other companies the latter engaged in patent disputes with. In 2006, AMD settled outstanding disputes with Rambus by willing to pay licensing costs for certain technologies claimed by Rambus, turning a leaf in the relations between the two. What Chinese sources are suggesting now, is that AMD will design its high-end GPU (codename: "Tahiti") in a way that will let it support both GDDR5 and XDR2. Certain higher-end SKUs based on Tahiti will use XDR2, while the slightly more cost-effective SKUs will use GDDR5.

In related news, other sources told TechPowerUp that AMD could adopt a "top-to-bottom" strategy with the high-end portion of its next-generation of products. This means that AMD could launch the dual-GPU "New Zealand" graphics card first, followed by single-GPU SKUs.
Source: Mydrivers
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64 Comments on Noises About Radeon HD 7900 Series with XDR2 Memory Grow

#1
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Sounds like a PR stunt by Rambus to try and get its share price up...
Posted on Reply
#2
Rowsol
Damn chocolate avatar... brb. Going to the store.
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#3
punani
I have my sights on the second version GTX 560 ti, but would it be wise to wait and see what AMD is cooking ?? As I'm in no hurry to upgrade my GPU.
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#4
chodaboy19
It's only a matter of time before RAMBUST sues AMD too. LOL
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#5
Isenstaedt
punaniI have my sights on the second version GTX 560 ti, but would it be wise to wait and see what AMD is cooking ?? As I'm in no hurry to upgrade my GPU.
I'd wait.
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#6
Thefumigator
It's all about performance, anyone has any idea on XDR2?
But looking at rambus financial situation, they have to start selling their work at a reasonable cost.
Posted on Reply
#7
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
ThefumigatorIt's all about performance, anyone has any idea on XDR2?
XDR2 has never been used on consumer PC GPUs, but Rambus makes a lot of song and dance about its "superiority over GDDR5".

XDR is used in Playstation 3 consoles.
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#8
WhiteLotus
What is the difference between the two here?
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#9
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
WhiteLotusWhat is the difference between the two here?
XDR2 apparently pushes twice the amount of data per clock compared to GDDR5. There is no comparison between the two from a neutral source, but here's Rambus PR video:

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#10
WhiteLotus
btarunrXDR2 apparently pushes twice the amount of data per clock compared to GDDR5. There is no comparison between the two from a neutral source, but here's Rambus PR video:

I see, perhaps add that to the OP.

So AMD are going for that "difference" to make their products more appealing that just another generic GPU.

Either that or this stuff really does work.
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#11
djisas
WhiteLotusWhat is the difference between the two here?
From the little i have researched, massive performance improvement with lower wattage than gdr5...

Just to put it simply...
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#12
Unregistered
Yeah, this is one of the things I've been waiting for. I had a pair of 128 MB Samsung PC800 RDRAM 10 years ago... on a Willamette 1.6 with a TNT2 32mb. lol. And it rocked. DDR has became a norm ever since it's launch - it killed both SD and RD on the desktop side.
Posted on Edit | Reply
#13
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
John DoeYeah, this is one of the things I've been waiting for. I had a pair of 128 MB Samsung PC800 RDRAM 10 years ago... on a Willamette 1.6 with a TNT2 32mb. lol. And it rocked. DDR has became a norm ever since it's launch - it killed both SD and RD on the desktop side.
You are currently running DDR3-SDRAM.
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#14
Casecutter
djisasmassive performance improvement with lower wattage than gdr5...
That's how I see it with 348-bit and 1Gb (or maybe less) AMD could achieve more bandwidth (thru-put), while keeping efficiency in check and cost down.

Beats a costly 512-Bit PCB, crammed with 2Gb of ram... That looks to be the trend for the competition and we know how AMD likes to buck the status quo. If it works it's good for the consumer.
btarunrwall of skepticism as it was deficient in plausibility...:shadedshu
That wasn't so much from the readers and respondents...
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#15
de.das.dude
Pro Indian Modder
John DoeYeah, this is one of the things I've been waiting for. I had a pair of 128 MB Samsung PC800 RDRAM 10 years ago... on a Willamette 1.6 with a TNT2 32mb. lol. And it rocked. DDR has became a norm ever since it's launch - it killed both SD and RD on the desktop side.
lol you so funny. the type of RAM we use is always SDram :D

we should actually be saying DDR2 SDRAM or DDR3 SDRAM.
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#16
Black Panther
I think in that case it's just DDR. I've got a Willamette 1.6 myself but the mobo broke.. And my daughter's pc is still running single core AMD, with DDR (because it's not DDR2 like my pc and far less DDR3 ;))
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#17
HumanSmoke
btarunrXDR2 apparently pushes twice the amount of data per clock compared to GDDR5. There is no comparison between the two from a neutral source, but here's Rambus PR video:
Rambus have an employee call Rob Dhat ? Why doesn't that surprise me ?
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#18
Unregistered
btarunrYou are currently running DDR3-SDRAM.
Obviously. :rolleyes: I was referring them as a whole. Yes, GDDR and DDR are different. Everybody knows that. This is the first change on memory used under desktops (not just on your mobo).
de.das.dudelol you so funny. the type of RAM we use is always SDram :D

we should actually be saying DDR2 SDRAM or DDR3 SDRAM.
Technically, yes, but we're currently using DDR RAM. 10 years ago, there was also SDR RAM for GPU's. So this is similar, as in an alternative to GDDR (XDR). :rolleyes:
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#19
Static~Charge
HumanSmokeRambus have an employee call Rob Dhat ? Why doesn't that surprise me ?
Don't forget Rambus's lawfirm: Dewey, Cheetum, and Howe.
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#20
EastCoasthandle
XDR 2 has a reference clock rate of only 800MHz. While GDDR5 has a reference clock rate of 1.5GHz. With that XDR2 can provide 16 bits of data per clock cycle. While GDDR5 can only provide 2 bits of data per clock cycle (which is why you see it at 1.5GHz). XDR2 is generally more efficient and requires less power. Along with it's use of FDMA, FlexLink, Micro-threading, differntial i/o's, etc I have to wonder if XDR2 is oc'ing friendly? From the initial information so far I would think that it's not. But if that is true I wouldn't think that is a negative thing. It already offers enough bandwidth. However, I also have to wonder if this can be achieved using current PCIe standards? Or would we need a next gen PCIe?

I would love to see a video tested using GTA V or SR3 with XDR2.
Posted on Reply
#21
Unregistered
EastCoasthandleXDR 2 has a reference clock rate of only 800MHz. While GDDR5 has a reference clock rate of 1.5GHz. With that XDR2 can provide 16 bits of data per clock cycle. While GDDR5 can only provide 2 bits of data per clock cycle (which is why you see it at 1.5GHz). XDR2 is generally more efficient and requires less power. Along with it's use of FDMA, FlexLink, Micro-threading, differntial i/o's, etc I have to wonder if XDR2 is oc'ing friendly? From the initial information so far I would think that it's not. But if that is true I wouldn't think that is a negative thing. It already offers enough bandwidth. However, I also have to wonder if this can be achieved using current PCIe standards? Or would we need a next gen PCIe?
Type of memory is unrelated to PCI-E lanes. It makes little difference on performance, nowhere more than what a new GPU offers over an older one.
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#22
EastCoasthandle
John DoeType of memory is unrelated to PCI-E lanes. It makes little difference on performance, nowhere more than what a new GPU offers over an older one.
I'm referring to the video card overall performance (IE 7970 or whatever they call it) not the IC.
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#23
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
John DoeObviously. :rolleyes: I was referring them as a whole. Yes, GDDR and DDR are different. Everybody knows that. This is the first change on memory used under desktops (not just on your mobo).
No, you weren't referring them as a whole. You were clearly ignorant to the fact that we use SDRAM even today. GDDR and DDR are both kinds of SDRAM. As a matter of fact, even RDRAM was a kind of SDRAM.
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#24
Unregistered
EastCoasthandleI'm referring to the video card at that point not the IC.
And it doesn't, there's nothing limiting the card from using XDR on PCI-E 2.0 x16.
btarunrNo, you weren't referring them as a whole. You were clearly ignorant to the fact that we use SDRAM even today. GDDR and DDR are both kinds of SDRAM. As a matter of fact, even RDRAM was a kind of SDRAM.
Really? I'm clearly ignorant eh? Way to go buddy. Yes, they ARE kinds of SDRAM. But they DIFFER between each. Full stop.
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#25
cadaveca
My name is Dave
John DoeType of memory is unrelated to PCI-E lanes.
IOMMU in 7-series GPU. That is all.

Pretty sure ECH was thinking about this when mentioning PCI-E. I am sure he was wondering is PCIe bandwidth was enough to take full advantage of the bandwidth offered by XDR2.

Not all users use VGAs for gaming..GPGPU has it's purposes too.
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