This is obviously a reference to Apples use of AMD GPUs in the MacBook pro. Ryzen is not even a laptop chip.I am not an expert in alternative factsI explicitly wrote: "at the presentation".
This is obviously a reference to Apples use of AMD GPUs in the MacBook pro. Ryzen is not even a laptop chip.I am not an expert in alternative factsI explicitly wrote: "at the presentation".
Ryzen 7 1700 seems to be a good candidate. Cheaper, with a higher MT performance than the i7 7700K, more cores than the usual i5 in 2015 iMacs and although it may have slower specs on ST than the i7, it will still beat the i5.
1700X could be a higher option, but with 95W TDP I doubt it unless we're talking about a redesign.
TDP of the 1700 is 65W, which should fit, given the savings on thermal heat by the Polaris architecture.
Does the iMac rely on dual channel memory? If so, there will be no change. However, it appears Ryzen will support 3 GHz DDR4 and maybe even 3.6 GHz.
AMD showed Apple as an OEM partner at the presentation of a CPU... It could be a sign (and it could not mean anything, a well!).
This is obviously a reference to Apples use of AMD GPUs in the MacBook pro. Ryzen is not even a laptop chip.
Welp, you are taking it out of context. She was talking about achievements of AMD as a whole in the past 12 months at that point, just like the biz talks of Tim Cook at the beginning of events.I am not an expert in alternative factsI explicitly wrote: "at the presentation".
The iMac is far too thin to host a Vega card without melting![]()
The iMac is far too thin to host a Vega card without melting) There are doubts even that it will make its way to the Mac Pro.
Was actually thinking about this during the presentation yesterday. Ryzen is giving AMD an edge on much more affordable multicore chips. It will be the perfect candidate for any sort of video work. Could definitely see apple utilizing the ryzen + vega combo, which from what we have seen so far, is pretty competitive to nvidia offerings as well.
The 1080m (150-180 TDP GPU) will push it well over the limit.
Already is floating around 45W TDP 8Core/16T Eng Sample of this CPUThis is obviously a reference to Apples use of AMD GPUs in the MacBook pro. Ryzen is not even a laptop chip.
The iMac is far too thin to host a Vega card without melting) There are doubts even that it will make its way to the Mac Pro.
Vega is being designed to run at the same TDP as the 390-395x.
There are two Vega chips. Vega 10 is the larger one with a TDP of 225-250 W (like the 390X) and a smaller Vega 11 that will likely be faster than the RX 480 but slower than the bigger Vega 10. We will probably know a lot more about both after tomorrows press conference by AMD.
My guess it that happens either next year or even later. Apple has a pattern of doing these sort of things late in the game.i think for sure 2 things will happen, the shrink in bezels, the trend already started with the new MBP,and new improved speakers, this trend also happen with the first ipad pro (12.9). Apple already put "retina" display from iphone - imacs, now they have to shrink the bezels and improved the speakers also in all their products...so expect this bezel thing, to happen also in next ipad and iphone 8
Given the last major update to the iMac was 2015, it's already behind. That's really the supply delays as Apple would only waist money releasing an iMac update with the older video card. The CPU isn't going to be much different from what we see now, but the SSD may be significantly larger given the newer tech released. Also, the video cards is the big push for an update. If they wait until next year, Apple will then either release with the Vega (TDP tuned for the iMac) or newer cards. If they release next year with the current line, they'd be selling a previous gen card by then. I expect them to release this year, but we may not see it until Fall.My guess it that happens either next year or even later. Apple has a pattern of doing these sort of things late in the game.
Well, looks like Vega will be out in time for the iMac as it is officially on the shelves on 4 Apr. According to sources, AMD all but skipped the high end gaming video cards by releasing to the low to mid-grade systems (Polaris 11). Polaris 10 has yet to release with the highest being 480. Because of this, I highly doubt that AMD will release a line that will be discontinued in less than 30 days.
In the past, AMD branded the Vega card as being the optimized FINFET card (the graphics card version of a tock). AMD has announced that they're launching their higher clocked, higher TDP cards with that optimization package so we are essentially seeing them skipping right to the higher end Vega. The question I have now is will the Polaris 11 see the Vega upgrade with this release?
How will this impact us? TDP has been brought up time & again & people keep saying that the Polaris 10 (an now Vega) cannot be used in the iMac. This is not true for a couple reasons:
1) Apple has time & again requested certain clocks & voltages to support the systems so they can get away with the highest end card they can cram in these compact systems. Reference the 295x & the temp issues with them being topped out.
2) Finfet by nature is a reduction in chipset size that allows AMD & nVidia to produce double the clock speeds while using THE SAME AMOUNT OF VOLTAGE as the previous generation chips. The currently supplied AMD 395x was not replaced with an equivalent die shrunk chip. This would fall within the Polaris 10 architecture, which means we may see the iMac jump to Vega. Given that the 395x pushes the temp limit of the generational design, I hope that AMD doesn't push to create a chip higher than the the FINFET upgrade could support, or else we'll see a repeat of nVidia's 7000-9000 & AMD's 6000 debacle.
To understand what happened then, ATI was purchased by AMD & the graphics division was shut down for a while. nVidia took advantage of this by maximizing the chip clocks & violating the rules engineers set to keep cards from failing:
80C=allows GPU to survive for the expected life=10 years
for every 5C over that, divide the life of the chip by half.
Example, I had a nVidia 8400 DESIGNED to run at 100C & it required replacing every 8 months for 3 years until the warranty finally ran out. Let's do the math:
80C=10 years,
85C=5 years,
90C=2.5 years
95C=1.25 years
100C=.625 years = 7.5 months. Being off by 15 days is not bad.
I would suspect we will see either Polaris 11 chips on the low end systems (with or without the Vega upgrade), & we will likely see Polaris 10 Vega chips on the high end iMacs (specifically the 27"). I also think that AMD will likely try to max out the Vega over what it can handle this year, but don't think the iMac will see those chips.
http://www.techspot.com/news/68361-amd-radeon-rx-500-gpus-reportedly-polaris-rebrand.html
http://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Radeon-RX-480M.164291.0.html
And that's the real crime... the word "thin" being used to describe a desktop computer!
And that's the real crime... the word "thin" being used to describe a desktop computer!
Ironically, MS surface studio is even thinner, but no complaints there!
Ironically, MS surface studio is even thinner, but no complaints there!
Vega GPUs are going to be called Radeon RX Vega. RX 580, 570, 560 and 550 are Polaris 10 and 11 rebrands.