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New Details Revealed on AMD's Upcoming Richland Chips - ... laptops and ultra-portable devices.
Tomshardware ^ | 7:00 AM - March 12, 2013 | by Niels Broekhuijsen

Posted on 03/12/2013 7:25:29 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach

The initial releases of AMD's new family of chips are aimed primarily at laptops and ultra-portable devices.

With the upcoming release of its Richland APUs, AMD aims to improve the attractiveness of its chips for mobile devices and is specifically targeting power consumption and dynamic load based on temperature and performance.

Based on the numbers AMD provided, Richland's overall power consumption appears to be slightly more conservative than Trinity's, yielding better efficiency, particularly in more demanding workloads. It's worth noting that the chart below does not include any benchmarks for full system load, but instead focuses on more realistic scenarios that an average user would encounter on a regular basis.

(Excerpt) Read more at tomshardware.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: hitech; mobile

1 posted on 03/12/2013 7:25:29 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: All
CPU WORLD:

AMD A10-Series A10-6800K

2 posted on 03/12/2013 7:29:03 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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To: All
And Hexus:

AMD spills details on mainstream Richland APUs

3 posted on 03/12/2013 7:31:47 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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Richland chips already going to laptop manufacturers.....

GCN graphics not in this one...will appear in Kaveri...late this year at the earliest.

4 posted on 03/12/2013 7:44:54 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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To: All
and Semi-Accurate:

AMD Goes Mobile First

5 posted on 03/12/2013 7:47:34 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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Lots of engineering to improve power management ....important for laptops.


6 posted on 03/12/2013 7:54:31 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

What I have been waiting years to see are fully modular components, with software, that can be assembled into several different devices. Of course, some modular parts would be unique to the device, but the others could be easily pulled from one device, and put into a different one.


7 posted on 03/12/2013 8:41:06 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy (Best WoT news at rantburg.com)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
Well,..on the chip things are modular....i.e. SoC...System on a chip.

And the APU has the Graphics on the Chip.

8 posted on 03/12/2013 9:00:15 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Yes, but imagine instead just getting something like a small thumb drive, that could just be inserted in a device that would be its “motherboard”. Push an eject button and it pops out, so it can be put in a very different device.

Just pop 3-5 such devices out of a desktop, and plug them into a laptop, etc. There are some laptop systems that are approaching this idea, but nobody has done serious cross platform yet.


9 posted on 03/12/2013 9:18:36 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy (Best WoT news at rantburg.com)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
Yes, but imagine instead just getting something like a small thumb drive, that could just be inserted in a device that would be its “motherboard”. Push an eject button and it pops out, so it can be put in a very different device.

Just pop 3-5 such devices out of a desktop, and plug them into a laptop, etc. There are some laptop systems that are approaching this idea, but nobody has done serious cross platform yet.

I this is the opposite direction the industry is going, really. The trend is toward small SOC (system on a chip) systems where everything is contained in a single chip.

10 posted on 03/12/2013 9:46:34 AM PDT by Sparticus (Tar and feathers for the next dumb@ss Republican that uses the word bipartisanship.)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

I want a computer that I can wear like a watch.


11 posted on 03/12/2013 10:20:53 AM PDT by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both)
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To: BenLurkin

I thought Apple was working on that.


12 posted on 03/12/2013 10:49:55 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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To: All
Was hoping, some of the stuff going to the game consoles would show up.....no to be yet...

From the Register:

AMD releases new 'Elite' laptop chips

'Richland' APUs a step above last year's 'Trinity' – but not a giant step

By Rik Myslewski in San Francisco, 12th March 2013

AMD has released its latest A-Series laptop chips, codenamed "Richland" and replacing the "Trinity" chips released last spring.

Is it a giant leap from Trinity to Richland? Well, no, but the new chips are clearly a step forward – if, in some cases, only incrementally.

Before we dig into Richland's upgrades, a refresher course to those Reg readers who don't regularly follow AMD's consumer efforts. Rather than merely calling its processors, well, processors, a few years back it decided to call their CPU-GPU mashups "APUs", which stands for accelerated processing units. They've stuck with that terminology, so it appears that we're stuck with it, as well.

The new Richland A-Series APUs are best described as improved Trinity APUs. They're based on the same second-generation "Piledriver" compute cores that had their APU debut in Trinity, and their GPU remains based on the AMD "Cayman" VLIW4 (very long instruction word) architecture.

AMD's Graphics Core Next, which we heard so much about at the company's 2011 Fusion Summit, doesn't make its appearance in Richland; it seems that we'll have to wait until AMD's next round – "Kaveri", "Kabini", and "Temash" – before GCN makes it into APUs.

But despite Richland's close resemblance to Trinity, there are improvements to celebrate – improved power management, for one. According to AMD, Richland's power-management system is much more granular than that of Trinity, allowing for more-precise control over which parts of the chip are lit up – and, more importantly, which parts can be shut down, thus saving power.

In most cases, the power savings over Trinity are nothing to get frightfully excited about, but AMD does claim that one workload – 720p video playback – can see power savings of as much as 25 per cent. Not too shabby, if true.

Any amount of power savings is to be welcomed, of course, and seeing as how both Richland's CPU and GPU cores can be cranked up and down in a base/turbo scheme, any power saved in other ways can keep them turboing that much longer without stepping over the total-power line, thus improving performance.

AMD First Quarter 2013 Elite A-Series APU details

And speaking of clock rates, Richland's are faster than those of Trinity, as well – but keeping with the rest of Richland's improvements, the speed-ups are modest but welcome. For example, the top-end Trinity A-10 had a base clock of 2.3GHz, and turbos up to 3.2GHz, while the new Richland A-10 has a base of 2.5GH and a turbo of 3.5GHz.

The clocks of that Richland A-10's 384 Radeon GPU cores are a bit zippier than those same number of cores in the Trinity A-10: a base of 533MHz and a turbo of 720MHz in the new chip versus 497MHz and 686MHz in the older chip.

As we said above: incremental.

In its announcement of the Richland line – excuse me, the "AMD Elite A-Series Accelerated Processing Units" – AMD touted a number of user-interface niceties for which the new APUs will provide support, including facial-recognition login, gestural control, video image-stabilization and color-enhancement, and more.

Those are all well and good, and should appear when laptops equipped with the new Richland chips hit retailers "beginning this month in select regions," as AMD explains. But what should really differentiate those laptops from the ones powered by chips from AMD's gargantuan competitor, Intel – aside from improved graphics in AMD's offerings – is price.

AMD did not provide details in its Tuesday release about pricing for the its chips – which, by the way, are all 35-watt parts with lower-power parts to come later – but you can be sure that its prices will be lower than those charged by Chipzilla. ®

13 posted on 03/12/2013 2:05:29 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach ((The Global Warming Hoax was a Criminal Act....where is Al Gore?))
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