AMD Unveils Preliminary Radeon HD 8000M Series Mobile GPU Details
MojoKid writes "AMD has just released some preliminary information regarding the company's upcoming Radeon HD 8000M series of mobile GPUs. Based on the naming convention alone, it may obvious that the Radeon HD 8000M series is AMD's second generation of products featuring the GCN (Graphics Core Next) architecture, which debuted in the Radeon HD 7000 series. Like its predecessors, the Radeon HD 8000M series targets gamers with full DirectX 11.1 support and improved gaming performance over the previous-gen, but the architecture also lends itself to GPU compute applications as well. The Radeon HD 8500M sports 384 Stream Processors with an Engine Clock up to 650MHz. Memory clocks will vary based on the use of GDDR3 or GDDR5 memory. The Radeon HD 8600M is essentially the same, but with a slightly higher Engine Clock up to 775MHz. The Radeon HD 8700M is also based on the same GPU, but will be clocked at up to 850MHz, for a further increase in performance over the 8600M. The Radeon HD 8800M series, however, is based on a larger, more powerful chip and will sport 640 Stream Processors with an engine clock of up to 700MHz. GDDR5 memory will be used exclusively with 8800M, at speeds up to 1125MHz. It will be interesting to see how these new GPUs stack up versus NVIDIA's latest GeForce 600M series of mobile chips."
I wonder if these new cards are gonna be any better mining those bitcoins even after the reward halving...
Intradasting....
Sorry, you have failed. HAND.
Wait, why am I replying to myself?
I have 350 heads on a 305 engine and a Nikon D3200 with a 18–55 with a new DX-format CMOS that can do 3.4 FPS while I chat over IAX using G.729.
Zoid.com
Honestly, that's sort of 50% of why the 600 series is such a badass in the mobile market: because it has a pretty damned low power draw and still manages to issue forth a lot of power. I'm seeing them show up in ultrabooks, for god's sake. Can AMD really bring the heat on this?
They only dropped old cards. Those which probably have better support from the open drivers anyway. Seriously, did you try them? You may have binned a perfectly good card for no reason.
While it's all fine and good emphatizing on the computing capabilities and bragging with MHz, GFLOPS and the such, any good slashdotter knows we're already well beyond the "good enough" threshold.
In the meantime, only few vague words are spent for improved power efficiency.
I personally don't feel the need for a graphic card that goes the double faster and draws 80% more power.
Give me a graphic card that goes same as the actual one, but consumes 40% less, thank you.
Mastering the English language is fucking easy: all you have to do is to put an f* word in every fucking sentence.
Did I just read a press release?
As the other A/C has pointed out... AMD only dropped support for older cards. Honestly the open source drivers are great.
My HTPC is a few years old, it has an onboard Radeon HD 3200 (ITX board). Again, using the open source Radeon drivers, it works excellent. Direct BluRay rips play flawless on 1080P display, audio over HDMI.
Recently received a new laptop as a gift. It has a Radeon HD 7500M in it. Using the open source drivers I have not had any problems. I don't play video games so I really can't tell you what to expect there, though.
It's been a rough road but KMS is starting to mature and "Just Works" in most sutations... I don't think the Ati Catalyst drivers support KMS yet.
I alredy have 8600 ...
oh wait never mind.
The open source drivers are good, but not great. My Radeon 5770 runs most Linux games fine, but Team Fortress 2 is so slow that it's not playable. Worse, the power management is next to useless, forcing me to manually (or rather, I use a script at boot) set the power profile to 'low' (with low performance as a result) if I don't want noise and high temperatures. The closed driver has excellent power management, but often crashes when resuming from suspend (which the open driver almost never does). IME, Radeon is great, but the Linux drivers come with so many tradeoffs that you're bound to be unhappy with them.
I can see a bit of a problem with the numbering system that nVidia and ATI use. nVidia had a range of mobile graphics processors that used the name 8x00m. Queue lawsuit and consumer confusion in 5...4...3...
and always have, but the 7970m has been out an age, was a good price, had potential to be the gaming card in mobile riggs - and came out with broken drivers. AMD seemingly had extreme disinterest in fixing these drivers, or were unable to fix the problem with drivers. Someone inside AMD has to get a grip and make sure issues like this get solved, resolved, fixed.
And I do not know how the 7970m got stellar reviews - because later it became legion that it has issues. I hope the 8000m series is better.
We`re all equal
When it comes to mobile they certainly lost. Enduro is still a work in progress while nvidias optimus works (unless you are using linux :) ).
When it comes to desktops i think they provide a better value than nvidias current offerings.
Well, based on the naming convention, it may obvious... or it may not.
You are refering to techreport articles right? There might be a problem or there might not be. I certainly havent seen any micro-stuttering with my hd7850. The type of tests they do are veeeeeery easy to manipulate. You just have to select a different short scene to render if you dont like the results and voila the other card wins. Average framerates might not tell you everything but atleast they are harder to manipulate. (though techreport still has a tendency to measure much lower average FPS for AMD than competing review sites)
These cards are based on the same Southern Islands core as the 7000 series. So, why is AMD calling these 8000 series? Because AMD has run out of money, causing the real 8000 series (Sea Islands) to be delayed: http://www.techspot.com/news/50975-amd-radeon-hd-8000-series-could-be-delayed-until-q2-2013.html
"It will be interesting to see how these new GPUs stack up versus NVIDIA's latest GeForce 600M series of mobile chips."
Not really. I care about how they stack up against the trinity A8 and A10's onboard graphics chips. Those things kick ass. One got a 6.6 if I remember correctly in WEI on a semi-gaming laptop I got for someone and it ran Fallout New Vegas at 60FPS at medium high settings at 1440x900. Anyone know if these are any faster? I would assume they are but for all I know they run in coordination with that modified crossfire feature that goes between a GPU and APU.
They have recently dropped support for anything up to the Radeon HD 4xxx. Which is not that old.
On the other hand, according to various articles on http://www.phoronix.com/ the open source Radeon drivers are making great progress. One drawback is that you may have to tinker with your Linux installation to get all of that: ;-)
You will need the very latest source code, which probably means recompiling mesa and maybe the kernel
C - the footgun of programming languages
Matter of taste.
For me, "good enough" means Half Life 2 graphics quality, which even an older card can handle. For instance, the Nvidia 8600 GT in my older, secondary PC from 2007 :-)
C - the footgun of programming languages
I really do not plan on playing games on a *shudders*, laptop. For someone that was really looking for the best value, the most performance for least cost, the desktop will always be where the cutting edge is on performance. You can't beat the desktop which does not have to worry about space, cooling and power restraints, that lead to lower powered devices that cost more.
Also, shouldn't AMD be producing x86 cell phone system on chips and working on getting these sold to manufacturers as it should have years ago? You still cannot purchase an x86 cell phone in the US despite them being available in other countries. Such chips are perfectly suitable for a cell phone and provide added benefit of compatability with PC software.
SWTOR for one, people experience this issue with. Dead Space 2 is another example, along with Saint's Row the Third.
Those are just some of the games, but yes, it has to do with this problem.
Average framerates are telling you nothing, because when being monitored, the framerates never drop. There's just stuttering in the rendering of certain objects.
In the case of SWTOR: The animation when people mount/dismount from speeders, certain casting animations and particle effects, shadowed text enabled - all examples of when you will see this happen, and this is with the framerates holding at a steady 60 FPS (V-Synch enabled).
@Mindless Drivel: 100% of Twitter posts ever Tweeted.
And what Laptop would that be, as my Pentium 3 laptop still runs SNES and PSX emulators JUST FINE.
Even my broken DV7 with an ATi4200HD mobile runs these emulators, killing floor, Unreal Tournament 2K4, etc. No issues.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Wasn't AMD supposed to have it's 8000/9000 series release with their documentation for the OSS drivers?
This would be a good oportunity for AMD to release driver documentation, so dev can start developing FLOSS drivers for *nix.
They have recently dropped support for anything up to the Radeon HD 4xxx. Which is not that old.
On the other hand, according to various articles on http://www.phoronix.com/ the open source Radeon drivers are making great progress. One drawback is that you may have to tinker with your Linux installation to get all of that: ;-)
You will need the very latest source code, which probably means recompiling mesa and maybe the kernel
I absolutely agree, it is not for the faint of heart or new users. I am sure as soon as the popular distros like Ubuntu, Mint and Arch shift into faster development cycles to keep up with the kernels new pace we will see things get easier for everyone.
I personally use Gentoo on my workstation since I built it and keep it current. Just upgraded my kernel to 3.7.1 with Gentoo patchset last night.
I am no stranger to compiling software and kernels.
Should also mention my HTPC and Laptop are also using Gentoo/Funtoo.