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Robert Hallock Announces His Departure from AMD

Did Intel snug him?
 
Just a quick question:
Dose he the one we should thank for "the fixer" trilogy?

Man, those was quite (intentionally?) pathetic and sad watch.

I dear AMD to do a falloup nowdays, it will be
halerios
 
Robert has been awesome to work with, I always loved his in-depth knowledge and willingness to answer every reasonable question
All the interview transcripts posted on TPU show this to be true. :p

I have to say some of AMD past marketing shown, there was little middle ground so it was either wall paint or monkey flung debris.
 
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But Hallock was responsible for some disinformation in the Zen 2 era, where he "applied" (on a blackboard) a PBO+ 200 MHz overclock on top of boost frequency, and then none could achieve anything remotely similar, not even with custom water cooling. Of course it was excused "just as an example".
 
honestly they could do so much better
 
AMD haven't been this DOOOOOOOOMED since Raja left. Might as well wind up the company now.
 
The whole valley is based on people leaving for something better.
That's the thing - he's not leaving for something better. He's just leaving.

But he likely has enough money where he doesn't need to get a job right away.
That might be an explanation, but somehow, I doubt it.
 
Good luck to him, for a regular Joe it wouldn't be a good time to look for a job.
 
Robert didn't always offer more information than AMD's slides/common knowledge
It's not always allowed. Even with a signed NDA, the consumer sales manager and a regional senior brand manager for a large vendor won't say much about a lot at the moment. Speaking to the general public would be even tighter.

Leaving a well-paid steady job to "explore new opportunities". What a load of shite! People usually say this after a disagreement with management.
Or he wanted to leave two years ago, or he feels his job has become stale, or or or... I couldn't imagine the 12th year of employment being as exciting as the first.
 
Or he wanted to leave two years ago, or he feels his job has become stale, or or or... I couldn't imagine the 12th year of employment being as exciting as the first.
I can't really think of a job that doesn't become stale after two weeks, so that's a good point.
 
I can't really think of a job that doesn't become stale after two weeks, so that's a good point.
I've previously left employment without having anything lined up, not because the job was BAD as such, but because the lack of excitement was taking its toll and it was a better idea to cut back on expenses for a few months rather than stick around until I found something new/something presented itself. If you have money in the bank and the type of resume he has, there is absolutely no reason to stick to a job you no longer enjoy. Mental well-being can be as important as financial well-being, and if your finances are rosy you may as well bail at the first opportunity.
 
There are some cases where employees leave a job and don't have anything lined up, but they are a small percentage. In the majority of cases, they obviously have another positioned already lined up and don't want anyone to know about it.

The first manager I worked under as a graduate put in his resignation and said he was "taking a big break to spend time with his family". Everyone was patting him on the back for being such a great family man. A few months later there was word spreading around the office of a competing firm that had just recently started up and......guess who was at the helm. Family man himself.
 
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But Hallock was responsible for some disinformation in the Zen 2 era, where he "applied" (on a blackboard) a PBO+ 200 MHz overclock on top of boost frequency, and then none could achieve anything remotely similar, not even with custom water cooling. Of course it was excused "just as an example".
LOL I was just about to reply to the thread "You can't leave, I still haven't gotten that 200MHz yet!"
 
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I don't know about you, but for me Robert will remain as _unattainable_4.75GHz_Ryzen3000_ (on first wave of Zen2 - so exactly).

What made it so?
A flaw? Misunderstanding? Deception, after all?

Who knows, but what makes the most sense to the average consumer in the end?
The fact, that he didn't get what was claimed.
 
What made it even more dishonest was Der8auer's poll after the launch where it was shown most CPUs didn't even achieve the advertised boost clock. Not even for a millisecond.

And now? Now we're waiting what the 7950X's "up to 5.7 GHz" boost clock, or "5.85 GHz Fmax" even means. We're fine with that Ryzen's can't perform any task at boost frequency, not even a purely synthetic single thread one. Sure, we need performance, frequency by itself is quite meaningless. But how do we know our very expensive CPU is performing as advertised? Frequency is the only thing advertised, promised.
 
It's Silicon Valley. How do you think it came into existence? It's not like Intel, AMD, Nvidia were there from Day One.

The whole valley is based on people leaving for something better. Shockley, Fairchild, HP, and similar companies were the cradles for many of today's tech powerhouses. The place nurtures entrepreneurship.

Based on Hallock's 12 year tenure, I suspect that Hallock had a big pile of RSUs vest in 2020 (ten year anniversary of his hiring date) but due to the pandemic he decided to stay put. Remember, Santa Clara County was the first jurisdiction in the USA to mandate shelter-in-place orders from county health officer Dr. Sara Cody. Had there been no pandemic he likely would have left two years ago.

There are still plenty of job opportunities for someone with his experience in the industry. But he likely has enough money where he doesn't need to get a job right away.
 
What made it even more dishonest was Der8auer's poll after the launch where it was shown most CPUs didn't even achieve the advertised boost clock. Not even for a millisecond.

And now? Now we're waiting what the 7950X's "up to 5.7 GHz" boost clock, or "5.85 GHz Fmax" even means. We're fine with that Ryzen's can't perform any task at boost frequency, not even a purely synthetic single thread one. Sure, we need performance, frequency by itself is quite meaningless. But how do we know our very expensive CPU is performing as advertised? Frequency is the only thing advertised, promised.
What is the reason behind it? I used to have a 5950X and never figured it out.

The 3100 in my HTPC, in the other hand, maintains its 3.9 GHz boost clock all the time, even when all cores are tasked. The 5500 I built my brother's new PC around clocks at a constant 4.25 GHz as well.
 
What made it even more dishonest was Der8auer's poll after the launch where it was shown most CPUs didn't even achieve the advertised boost clock. Not even for a millisecond.
That was in the early days of Zen2 right? I think I disabled something called CPPC for a few AGESA updates and was able to get around the boosting problem until they fixed it.
 
That was in the early days of Zen2 right? I think I disabled something called CPPC for a few AGESA updates and was able to get around the boosting problem until they fixed it.
Yes, and Hallock was explaining the new PBO+ overclocking of boost frequencies just before the launch of Zen 2.

AMD then publicly acknowledged there is a bug in AGESA, and prepared the fix. It took quie a bit of time, and some motherboard vendors took even longer then to implement the new bios. Fix was confirmed to have worked in a poll, but later some users reported that subsequent bios releases again lowered the maximum boost frequency - but then there was no activism to confirm or deny that. The same happened with Zen 3, again noone organised wider consumer pressure to fix that.

But as we know, it didn't really matter, Ryzen processors don't perform any meaningful task at boost frequency. It's just a random high frequency CPU boosts to with very light load for a very short time, so it looks good on paper. The performance remained largely the same for processors that boosted properly and the ones that were missing the mark by as much as 200 MHz.
 
There are some cases where employees leave a job and don't have anything lined up, but they are a small percentage. In the majority of cases, they obviously have another positioned already lined up and don't want anyone to know about it.

In the upper income range it's a whole different world. If you're already sitting on millions you just walk out. ;)

And you don't even care if you get fired for having a Youtube channel. Can't make this $h1t up. Silicon valley seems to be pretty facist.

 
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