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Overclocked Radeon Card Breaks 1 GHz

dacaldar writes "According to Yahoo Finance, noted Finnish over-clockers Sampsa Kurri and Ville Suvanto have made world history by over-clocking a graphics processor to engine clock levels above 1 GHz. The record was set on the recently-announced Radeon® X1800 XT graphics processor from ATI Technologies Inc."

45 of 199 comments (clear)

  1. Huzzah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What a day for world history! It will be remembered forever!

    1. Re:Huzzah! by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 3, Funny

      A small clock cycle for Radeon, a giant step for mankind?

    2. Re:Huzzah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
      note that before you go celebrating too much, the 1ghz speed was only stable in 2D MODE: the 3dmark score is for when they had backed off the overclock to about 880, see here

      http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php ?p=1104977#post1104977 sampsa is asked Were you able to run any benchmarks at that speed or was that a Windows stable shot???? Anyway that is still hella fast with no artifacts. sampsa's response Just a Windows shot in 2D.

      so still impressive, but not what they describe

  2. One wonders... by kko · · Score: 5, Interesting

    why this announcement would come out on Yahoo! Finance

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    1. Re:One wonders... by JamesTRexx · · Score: 2, Funny

      Looking at the article I'd say to give ATI shares a boost.

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    2. Re:One wonders... by Jarnis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ... because ATI made a big press release about it.

      Since their product is still mostly vapor (you can't buy it yet), and nVidia is currently owning them in the high end market because ATI's product is so late, one has to grasp straws in order to try look l33t in the eyes of the potential purchasers.

      Wish they'd spend less time yapping and more time actually putting product on the shelves.

      Nice overclock in any case, but ATI putting out a press release about it is kinda silly

    3. Re:One wonders... by Eugene · · Score: 3, Informative

      that's 1800XL, (comparable to 7800GT). 1800XT is probably still a month away from release.

  3. No big surprise by Z0mb1eman · · Score: 4, Funny

    I didn't have Slashdot in a full screen window, so the headline read:

    Overclocked Radeon Card Breaks
    1 GHz

    Was wondering why an overclocked card breaking is such a big deal :p

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  4. Benchmarks? by fishybell · · Score: 5, Funny

    Without the pretty graphs how will I know what's going on?!

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    1. Re:Benchmarks? by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 5, Informative

      Graphic showing 3DMark score of 12419:
      http://www.muropaketti.com/3dmark/r520/12419.png

      Pictures of their setup/methods:
      http://www.muropaketti.com/3dmark/r520/ghz/

    2. Re:Benchmarks? by diablomonic · · Score: 4, Informative
      have a look at xtremesystems.com/forums, this is where they talked about it first (I was reading it there a couple of days ago). at that stage they had graphics core at 1.0 something ghz and memory at 2.0 something ghz, but it was only stable in 2d mode. the highest they could get in 3dmark at that stage was around 12400 and yes, that was with the overclock backed off a bit to 800 and something

      in other words... still impressive (no other chip has been able to overclock to 1ghz, even in 2d mode) but not quite what you were hoping for

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  5. Speed play offs. by neologee · · Score: 5, Funny

    I always knew ati would finnish first.

  6. A bit presumptious? by syphax · · Score: 4, Insightful

    have made world history

    I think that's going a bit far. Good for them and everything, but world history? V-E day, Einstein's 1905, Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the bus- these events impact world history (sorry for the all-Western examples); making a chip oscillate faster than an arbitrary threshold does not.

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    1. Re:A bit presumptious? by bcattwoo · · Score: 5, Funny

      What are you talking about? I'm sure I will have next October 26 off to celebrate Overclocked Radeon Broke 1GHz Barrier Day. Heck, this may even become Overclocked GPU Awareness Week.

  7. n00b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    i clocked mine to 12 ghz with a combination of liquid magnesium and wd40.

  8. The culprit by ChrisF79 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think we've found the source of global warming.

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  9. World history? by Seanasy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ... have made world history...

    Uh, it's cool and all but not likely to be in the history books. (easy on that hyperbole, wiil ya)

    1. Re:World history? by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Funny

      I am getting fed up with all the hyperbole around here ,they are worse than Hitler

      (*Think about it*^)

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  10. Someday people will ask... by Keith+Mickunas · · Score: 4, Funny

    where were you when the first video card was overclocked to 1GHz. And most people will respond "huh?".

    Seriously, "world history"? There's no historical significance here. It was inevitable, and no big deal.

  11. Re:GPU to excel CPU by TEMM · · Score: 2, Interesting

    GPU's are great at working on linear algebra problems, which are basically what graphics are. For general purpose computing however, they would not be that much faster than a CPU

  12. We'll just see by crottsma · · Score: 5, Funny

    NVidia will make a competitve model, with blackjack, and hookers.

  13. What's the point of these tests? by pclminion · · Score: 3, Insightful
    If you cool a chip, you can make it run faster. This is a matter of physics that doesn't need to be tested any more than it already has been. In some small way I appreciate the geek factor but I'm far more interested in geek projects that have some practical use.

    And as for being the first people in the world to do this... the chances of that are small. I'm sure there are people at Radeon (and other companies) who have done things far more bizarre, but didn't announce it to the world.

    1. Re:What's the point of these tests? by pclminion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yes, but a lot of different chips have different overclocking potential. It's interesting to see which can be pushed the furthest, even if its impractical.

      Really, I don't think it's interesting whatsoever. It's like testing the strength of various bulletproof glass samples at a temperature of -100 C. The fact is, bulletproof glass is not used in such environments so the test gives no useful information.

      Beside, since when are geeky pursuits practical?

      I can't believe you're being serious. My geeky pursuits pay for my house.

  14. Not for the weak by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The team, optimistic that higher speeds could ultimately be achieved with the Radeon X1800 XT, attained the record speeds using a custom-built liquid nitrogen cooling system that cooled the graphics processor to minus-80 degrees Celsius.

    It seems we may have a ways to go before it can be done with standard air cooling. I actually didn't think that operating temperatures for these processors went down to -80C.

  15. comon now by Silicon+Mike · · Score: 5, Funny

    If I could only go back in time and add liquid nitrogen to my 8088 processor. I know I could have gotten it up to 5.33 mhz, no problem. NetHack benchmarks would have been off the chart.

  16. It was 2D mode only by anttik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sampsa Kurri told in a Finnish forum that it was over 1 GHz only in 2D mode. They are trying to run it with same clocks later. ATI left some tiny details away from their press release... ;P

    1. Re:It was 2D mode only by jandrese · · Score: 4, Funny

      It also apparently crashed a lot. This is kind of like saying "I got a Volkswagon Beetle up to 200kph[1]!!!" with a whole lot of modifications.

      [1] Going downhill

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    2. Re:It was 2D mode only by slackmaster2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Are you sure? TFA does say "Noted Finnish over-clockers Sampsa Kurri and Ville Suvanto achieved graphics engine clocks of 1.003 GHz and a memory speed of 1.881 GHz (940.50 MHz DDR (dual data-rate) memory clocks) with maximum system stability and no visual artifacts."

      The phrase "maximum system stability" though might be misleading. If you define it as just POSTing, then man I've done some awesome overclocking myself! :)

      Interesting that these overclockers are "noted", and "Finnish." That does sort of give them a little mystique, no? Anytime I hear about a Noted [country name] [scientist|engineer] I always think of an older guy in a white lab coat in some top secret super science facility working on amazing advances in science, like overclocking consumer video cards.

  17. Re:GPU to excel CPU by steveo777 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I recall reading an article on /. a long time ago involving a group of coders from MIT or something like that who pitted a P4 CPU against an ATI or nVidia GPU that was running at about a third the clock speed with a tenth of the memory. They were, of course, running mostly linear equations and the CPU got it's pants kicked in by just under an order of magnitude IIRC.

    What I've been waiting for is some sort of mathematics program (I used to use Mathematica in college) that could utilize this concentrated power, rather than hampering the CPU.

    Does anyone know if any researchers have gone as far as to utilize a GPU for anything like this?

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  18. This record already broken by Ezku · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sampsa and Ville already broke their own record by overclocking the same setup to over 1GHz for both the GPU and memory. See pictures over at Muropaketti.

  19. Hot Hot Hot! by tradjik · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now, just pair that up with Intel's new dual-core Xeons and watch your power meter spin! At least you won't have to worry about the increase in gas prices this winter, you can just run your PC to heat your home.

  20. FPS by koick · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cuz you know it's like way better to play Quake IV at 953 Frames Per Second. Totally!

  21. That's sad... by Xshare · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's just sad... that video card now has more clockspeed and more memory than my own main computer.

  22. Re:GPU to excel CPU by LLuthor · · Score: 3, Informative
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  23. Re:GPU to excel CPU by OzPeter · · Score: 2, Informative

    You mean like these people are doing?

    Generic GPU programming

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  24. Re:GPU to excel CPU by Jerry+Coffin · · Score: 4, Informative
    The performance of GPU's seem to grow faster than those of CPU's. I remember someone had proposed to use GPU's to proces generic data. It would be 12 times faster than a CPU.

    Go here for several examples of this -- far from simply having been proposed, it's been done a fair number of times.

    The thing to keep in mind with this is that while the GPU has a lot of bandwidth and throughput, most of that is due to a high degree of parallelism. Obviously 1 GHz hasn't been a major milestone for CPUs for quite a while, but CPUs are only recently starting to do multi-core processing, while GPUs have been doing fairly seriously parallel processing for quite a while.

    Along with that, the GPU has a major advantage for some tasks in having hardware support for some relatively complex operations that require a fair amount of programming on the CPU (e.g. multiplying, inverting, etc., small vectors, typically has a single instruction to find Euclidean distance between two 3D points, etc.)

    That means the GPU can be quite a bit faster for some things, but it's a long ways from a panacea -- you can get spectacular results applying a single mathematical transformation to a large matrix, but if you have a process that's mostly serial in nature, it'll probably be substantially slower than on the CPU.

    Along with that, development for the GPU is generally somewhat difficult compared to development on the CPU. Writing the code itself isn't too bad, as there are decent IDEs (e.g ATI's RenderMonkey) but you're working in a strange (though somewhat C-like) language. Much worse is essentially a complete lack of debugging support. Along with that, you have to take the target GPU into account in the code (to some extent). I just got a call in the middle of a meeting this morning from one of my co-workers, pointing out that some of my code works perfectly on my own machine, but not at all on any his. I haven't had a chance to figure out what's wrong yet, but I'm betting it stems from the difference in graphics controllers (my machine has an nVidia board but his has Intel "Extreme" (ly slow) graphics).

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  25. Re:GPU vs. CPU Speed by freidog · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since DirectX 8 (I think), the color values have been floating point numbers, this is to avoid loosing a lot of possible values through all blending with multi-texturing and effects (fog, lighting ect) which are of course much slower than very simple integer calculations. Even on the Athlon64's FP add and muls are 4 cycles, you'd have to make the top end A64 about 700mhz if you make them single cycle execution. (multi-cycle instructions aren't as bad a thing on the CPU as there are plenty of other things to do while you wait, not so in GPUs).

    GPUs have also tended to focus on parallel execution - at least over the last few years - increasing the number of pixels done at the same time, to compensate for not being able to hit multi-ghz speeds, so yes they have many more transistors than typical CPUs (the 7800GTX might break 300 million, well over 250 million) - and of course heat is an issue if you push the voltage and / or clock speeds to far. The last few generations of GPUs have been up around 65-80W real world draw, more than most CPUs out there. And of course GPUs have very little room for cooling in those expansion slots.

  26. Re:Awesome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny


    Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your
    newsletter.

  27. Because it's worth zilch without... by GrAfFiT · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...the pictures of the rig : here they are, 3DMark05 included.

  28. O RLY? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.bfgtech.com/7800GTX_256_WC.html

    BFG GeForce(TM) 7800 GTX OC(TM) with Water Block. Factory overclocked to 490MHz / 1300MHz (vs. 400MHz / 1000MHz standard), this built-to-order card will feature a water block instead of a GPU fan for those wanting to purchase or who may already have an existing liquid-cooled PC system. BFG will hand-build your card using Arctic Silver 5 Premium Thermal Compound. Easily hooked up to any existing 1/4" tubing system or to 3/8" tubes with the included adapters, this card runs cool and silent. BFG Tech is proud to offer their true lifetime warranty on this graphics card. (Card with water block requires internal or external water cooled system, sold separately.)

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    1. Re:O RLY? by GarfBond · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good job not even reading the summary. The card you referenced is under half the speed of this ridiculously overclocked ATI card, which happens to be 1GHZ core/1.8GHZ memory.

  29. It'll just about... by David+Horn · · Score: 5, Funny

    It'll just about be able to handle Windows Vista... :-)

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  30. Re:GPU vs. CPU Speed by xouumalperxe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, while the CPU people are finally doing dual core processors (essentially, two instruction pipelines in one die, plus cache et al), the GPU people have something like 24 pipelines in a single graphics chip. Why is it that the CPU people have such lame parallelism?

    To answer both questions. Graphics are trivial to parallelize. You know to start with that you'll be doing essentially the same code for all pixels, and each pixel is essentially independent from its neighbours. So doing one or twenty at the same time is mostly the same, and since all you need is to make sure the whole screen is rendered, each pipeline just needs to grab the next unhandled pixel. No syncronization difficulties, no nothing. Since pixel pipelines don't stop each other doing syncing, you effectively have a 24 GHz processor in this beast.
    On the other hand, you have an Athlon 64 X2 4800+ (damn, that's a needlessly big, numbery name). It has two cores, each running at 2.4 GHz (2.4 * 2 = 4.8, hence the name, I believe). However, for safe use of two processors for general computing purposes, lots of timing trouble has to be handled. Even if you do have those two processors, a lot of time has to be spent making sure they're coherent, and the effective performance is well below twice that of a single processor at twice the clock speed.

    So, if raising the speed is easier than adding another core, and gives enough performance benefits to justify it, without the added programming complexity and errors (there was at least one privilege elevation exploit in linux that involved race conditions in kernel calls, IIRC), why go multiple processor earlier than needed? Of course, for some easily parallelized problems, people have been using multiprocessing for quite a while, and actually doing two things at the same time is also a possibility, but not quite as directly useful as in the graphics card scenario.

  31. Re:GPU to excel CPU by Mostly+a+lurker · · Score: 5, Informative
    A good question! This excerpt from a recent article in Extreme Tech seems relevant:
    The third future project at ATI is dramatically improved support for the GPGPU scene. These are researches, mostly academic, that are tapping into the massive parallel computing power of graphics processors for general computing tasks, like fluid dynamics calculations, protein folding, or audio and signal processing. ATI's new GPU architecture should be better at GPGPU tasks than any that has come before, as it provides more registers per pipeline than either ATI's old architecture or Nvidia's new one. This is a sore spot for GPGPU developers but not really a limitation for game makers. The improved performance of dynamic branching in the new architecture should be a huge win for GPGPU applications as well. Developers working to enable general purpose non-graphics applications on GPUs have lamented the lack of more direct access to the hardware, but ATI plans to remedy that by publishing a detailed spec and even a thin "close to the metal" abstraction layer for these coders
  32. A Fraud! A Sham! A Scandal! by TheVorp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not sure if anyone else noticed, but the videocard in question was actually overclocked to 1003.50 MhZ, not exACTly a true GhZ, eh? This is the same kind of math that rips me off of gigs on my mp3 player and HDD. Nevertheless, I welcome the first vc to be clocked to 0.97998046875 GhZ!