Thursday 3 February 2011

The Brazos Review: AMD's E-350 Supplants ION for mini-ITX

AMD has been curiously absent from the value netbook and nettop segments since Atom’s arrival nearly three years ago. These markets are highly profitable only for component vendors, as the OEMs that sell netbooks and nettops must survive on very slim margins in order to hit aggressive price points. It wasn’t too long ago that we were shocked by $699 desktop PCs, but to now be able to get a fully functioning portable PC with display at below $300 is impressive. In order for the profit equation to work out however, you can’t simply scale down a larger chip - you need an architecture targeted specifically at the type of very light workloads you expect to encounter in these segments. Underclocking and undervolting an architecture targeted at high end desktops or servers won’t cut it.

Generally a single microprocessor architecture can cover an order of magnitude of power envelopes. You can take an architecture from 10W - 100W using clock speed, voltage scaling and disabling features (e.g. cutting cache sizes). You can’t efficiently take a 100W architecture and scale it down to 1W. Intel realized this with Atom, and what resulted was a new architecture designed to span the 0.5W - 5W range. Given the constraints of the process (Atom was built at 45nm) and a desire to keep die size down to a minimum (and thus maximize profits), Intel went with a dual-issue in-order architecture reminiscent of the old Pentium - but with a modern twist.

AMD came to the same realization. For it to compete in these value markets, AMD couldn’t rely on its existing Phenom II derived architectures. The Phenom II and its relatives currently span a range of TDPs from 9W to 140W, and at the lower end of that spectrum we’re talking about some very low clock speeds and performance targets. Getting down to 1W was out of the question without a separate design.

What AMD came up with was a core called Bobcat, initially targeted for netbooks, notebooks, nettops and entry level desktops. Architecturally Bobcat is a significant step ahead of Atom: while still dual-issue, it features an out-of-order execution engine making it the Pentium Pro to Atom’s Pentium.

It isn’t just CPU architecture that AMD surpassed Atom with, the first incarnation of Bobcat is an integrated SoC with on-die DirectX 11 GPU. AMD calls this combination a Fusion APU (Accelerated Processing Unit) as it places both a CPU and GPU on a single die. Read on for our full review of AMD's first Fusion part: the E-350.

]]>

0 comments:

Labels

(Electronics) 2011: 2012: 3.4GHz 400MHz 4x512 acpi_call Adapter Alienware all-in-one Amd processors AMD's AMD’s Analysis Android Angry Announced Announcement announces Antec Apple Apple's Arctic Arrives Aspire ASRock Athlon Audio Battle Benchmarked Biostar Blackberry Blu-ray Bluetooth Bridge Broadband Browser Budget business Cache camera Chromebook Compound Computer Computers) Computex Concept Cooler Corsair Crysis Dell's Design Desktop Desktops Details Devices Diamond Digital Display Download Drive External Extreme Facebook feature features First flash Fujitsu Fusion Future Galaxy Gaming GeForce Gigabyte Honeycomb HSFPHASECM India Indian iPad iPhone Keyboard Keyboards Keypad Kingston Laptop Laptops latest Latitude launched launches Leaked Lexmark's LGA1155 LGA1366 LGA775 Light Llano Logitech M2N-SLI MacBook Master Medal Media Medion Mini-Review Mobile mobiles module Motherboard MotherBoard's Motherboards Motorola Mouse MSI's MSM8660 Multimedia National NC215S Netbook Netbooks Nexus nFORCE Nokia Non-ECC notebook Notebooks NTLDR NVIDIA NVIDIA's Offers omnia Optical Optimus Option Overclock Overclocked overview panasonic Panda Panel Patriot Pavilion PC2-5300 PC2-6400 Performance Phone Plans player PlayStation Portable Postpaid Power PowerPC Preview Preview: Price Prices ProBook Processor Processors Project Projector Propus Qosmio Quad-Core Qualcomm Quick Radeon RadTech Rates Razer Registry release Released Releases Retail Review Review: Reviews Rupees Rupess Samsung SandForce Sandy Satellite SDRAM Seagate Select Sensitive Series Series™ Server shutdown Shuttle Silent Silicon Silver Single Small Smartphone Smartphones Socket SODIMM Solar Solid Speakers special Specifications Specs Speed Store Super tablet Tablets takes Tariff Technology Tegra Testing Thermal ThinkPad Thunderbolt Toshiba touch TouchPad Touchscreen TouchSmart toughbook Tower Troubleshooting Tutorial: Ultimate Ultra unveils Update Verizon Vertex ViewSonic Viliv Vista Vodafone Voodoo webOS Western white Wi-Drive Wi-Fi WiMax Windows Wireless Workstations: World Writer www.phoronix.com Xperia Zotac

  © Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP