• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD Gives Names to Dual-GPU Configurations Between APUs and Discrete GPUs

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,670 (7.43/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Years ago, AMD's integrated graphics chipsets offered users the ability to pair integrated graphics processors with entry-level discrete graphics cards to work in tandem, and increased performance ideally by 50%, this technology was called Hybrid CrossFire. With the latest AMD A-Series APUs, AMD is packing much more powerful GPU components, and in the process, giving users the ability to pair the GPU component with a discrete graphics card. In the discrete graphics sphere, AMD CrossFireX already allows the pairing between two graphics cards that use the same ASIC, even if they're different models (for example, you can pair a Radeon HD 5770 with a HD 5750).

The GPU component inside A-Series APUs are essentially similar to lower mid-range discrete GPUs from AMD's current generation, in having 400, 320, or 240 stream processors, giving you the ability to pair them with discrete graphics cards based on Turks (HD 6500 and HD 6600 series) or Caicos (HD 6300 and HD 6400 series). Unlike with Hybrid CrossFireX, AMD gave marketing names to the resulting dual-GPU setup between an APU and a discrete GPU. For example, pairing an A8-3850's APU with a discrete Radeon HD 6670 GDDR5 will give you a configuration "called" Radeon HD 6990D2. We see what you did there, AMD. So the next time you're buying a pre-assembled PC and you see "HD 6990D2" in the specs sheet, and the entire PC is priced under $800, you have no reason to jump through the roof in joy. Refer to the table below for more amazing configuration names.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
  • Like
Reactions: 7mm
That's just silly. The whole rest of the configs aren't too bad. It pops it up by not even a full level, i.e. a 6450 becomes 6510 or a 6670 becomes a 6710. But the whopper of a jump up in nomenclature from 6670 (discrete) to 6990 is way out of sync. If it followed the table trend it should be 6710.

Still, it doesn't matter too much, i still see PC's prebuilt by big store labelled as gaming PC's with a GT430 or a HD 64 something.

This is the whole f*cking reason consoles win at this. You buy a gaming pc called a 6990 and you associate it with a HD6990 and you think it'll kick ass when in reality, you play Metro or Stalker or Crysis and it limps about like a rotten sausage. So your store bought gaming pc sux, so you buy a console next time.

Bah, shakes fist at AMD.
 
I'd be interested to see if they also do this with the BD APUs as well. Would be nice if the intergrated GPU was at 6800 or 6900 level.
 
What is this, misleading marketing? If they want to pair up APU with a 6670 it ought to be something like 6671 or somthing, why use existing numbers? That's just dog, it makes more sense if 6990D2 can pair up with an ACTUAL 6990, now that would be interesting. Extra 10% performance without overclock on 6990 anyone?
 
I thought it was launching today, today being 24th
 
No way.

It's a silly typo.:banghead:
Should be 6690D2:slap:
 
Beavercreek? lol!
 
I'm going to have to agree with vanyots. Most likely a typo.

If not, shame on them.
 
I wish a manufacturer would make an SR-2 type board with for the llano line. I know the performance wouldnt be great but id lve to see how those APUs work together.
 
I'd be interested to see if they also do this with the BD APUs as well. Would be nice if the intergrated GPU was at 6800 or 6900 level.

there's no way with current technology,they'd be able to slap a hd6800 die on to the cpu.
we'll have to wait another 2 or 3 generation of gpu.
it is nice to see a hd6600 being integrated tho.
 
I'm going to have to agree with vanyots. Most likely a typo.

If not, shame on them.

It is for sure, click the image it does say 6690d2 on there : ]
 
Um, no ATI was based in Canada, but I think you should be looking towards Austin, Texas.

Ah then American Beaver. Much better the Canadian beaver. :laugh:
 
Why cant they just call it like this, for example 6670+6450. So much simpler without guessing game, and misleading names.
 
Why cant they just call it like this, for example 6670+6450. So much simpler without guessing game, and misleading names.

Say that five times fast and tell me it's simpler than just saying something like 6690. :cool:
 
Say that five times fast and tell me it's simpler than just saying something like 6690. :cool:

Ok, not the most neat solution, but still provide most information, which is what we need. They could have done something like this though, eg: 6670+6450 -> 66745. 1 digit longer than the current generations, and lose none of the information.
 
there's no way with current technology,they'd be able to slap a hd6800 die on to the cpu.
we'll have to wait another 2 or 3 generation of gpu.
it is nice to see a hd6600 being integrated tho.

So you reckown AMD are going to pair their perfomance desktop cpu with the same GPU as their low power laptop one? That would be a shame and rather pointless but I guess as SB has intergrated GPU, AMD has to follow suit.
 
So you reckown AMD are going to pair their perfomance desktop cpu with the same GPU as their low power laptop one? That would be a shame and rather pointless but I guess as SB has intergrated GPU, AMD has to follow suit.

We have reached a point where over 50% (a very rough guesstimate, might be as little as 10% to 0%) of the people using a computer cannot notice much difference between a high powered rig and a regular rig in most of their daily tasks. With that in mind, its a smart move.
 
Ok, not the most neat solution, but still provide most information, which is what we need. They could have done something like this though, eg: 6670+6450 -> 66745. 1 digit longer than the current generations, and lose none of the information.

I hear ya, but my argument is that WE don't need that info. Most of us will be able to recognize that the HD 6690 doesn't correspond to any discrete GPU, and we can just take 10 seconds to google what GPUs make up a 6690 and then decide. But for most consumers who are uninformed and easily swayed by the typical Best Buy Deuche (the target Llano audience), bigger numbers are better.

I suppose 66745 > 6690, but people might be like, "wtf?" if they saw that. :laugh:
 
I hear ya, but my argument is that WE don't need that info. Most of us will be able to recognize that the HD 6690 doesn't correspond to any discrete GPU, and we can just take 10 seconds to google what GPUs make up a 6690 and then decide. But for most consumers who are uninformed and easily swayed by the typical Best Buy Deuche (the target Llano audience), bigger numbers are better.

I suppose 66745 > 6690, but people might be like, "wtf?" if they saw that. :laugh:

At the end of the day, marketing > sense :mad:
 
I have just one thing to add:
ee39a85f-8d05-46ef-ae24-28a0fa3a8999.jpg

:nutkick:

But come on guys look on the bright side - at least now we'll be able to afford HD6990s :)
 
i'm pretty sure that 6990d2 in the table is an error and is supposed to read 6690d2.
this is an official AMD slide:
amd-llano-dualgpu-branding_575px.jpg

though it only shows laptop configs.
 
Back
Top