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posted by martyb on Monday January 18 2016, @08:17AM   Printer-friendly

In a VentureBeat interview with Raja Koduri, head of the Radeon Technologies Group at AMD, the company continues to advocate for virtual reality running at "16K resolution" at up to 240 Hz:

When Advanced Micro Devices created its own stand-alone graphics division, Radeon Technologies Group, and crafted a new brand, Polaris, for its upcoming graphics architecture, it was an admission of sorts. AMD championed the combination of processors and graphics into a single chip, dubbed the accelerated processing unit (APU). But the pendulum swung a little too far in that direction, away from stand-alone graphics. And now it's Raja Koduri's job to compensate for that.

I interviewed Koduri at the 2016 International CES, the big tech trade show in Las Vegas last week. He acknowledged that AMD intends to put graphics back in the center. And he said that 2016 will be a very big year for the company as it introduces its advanced FinFET manufacturing technology, which will result in much better performance per watt — or graphics that won't melt your computer. Koduri believes this technology will help AMD beat rivals such as Nvidia. AMD's new graphics chips will hit during the middle of 2016, Koduri said.

Beyond 2016, Koduri believes that graphics is going to get more and more amazing. Virtual reality is debuting, but we won't be completely satisfied with the imagery until we get 3D graphics that can support 16K screens, or at least 16 times more pixels on a screen that[sic] we have available on most TVs today. Koduri wants to pump those pixels at you at a rate of 240 hertz, or changing the pixels at a rate of 240 times per second. Only then will you really experience true immersion that you won't be able to tell apart from the real world. He calls it "mirror-like" graphics. That's pretty far out thinking.

AMD's "Polaris" GPUs will be released sometime during the summer of 2016. Along with AMD's "Zen" CPUs and APUs, Polaris GPUs will be built using a 14nm FinFET process, skipping the 20nm node.


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  • (Score: 2) by sudo rm -rf on Monday January 18 2016, @04:44PM

    by sudo rm -rf (2357) on Monday January 18 2016, @04:44PM (#291153) Journal

    The thing is, long time ago I was one of them.

    Me too, and I am still, since forever.

    But after some time, I just got tired of [...]Fighting the buggy drivers, [...]totally absent support for Linux

    Agreed and agreed. I seriously consider buying an nVidia card next time I upgrade my windows box. And for my linux notebook, the next one will definetly not have AMD inside.

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  • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Monday January 18 2016, @05:19PM

    by Gravis (4596) on Monday January 18 2016, @05:19PM (#291166)

    Agreed and agreed. I seriously consider buying an nVidia card next time I upgrade my windows box.

    the fact that you still have a windows box after everything MS has done really devalues your opinion.

    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Tork on Monday January 18 2016, @05:35PM

      by Tork (3914) Subscriber Badge on Monday January 18 2016, @05:35PM (#291175)
      Why? If he had anything but a Windows box you wouldn't be having an nVidia vs. AMD debate.
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      • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Monday January 18 2016, @06:58PM

        by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Monday January 18 2016, @06:58PM (#291202)

        My last video card purchase was an nVidia GeForce 6200 PCI card. The nouveau maintainers assured me that the card was reverse-engineered (enough to work). The free ATI drivers are kind of hit-and-miss (at least for older cards).

        BTW, my "new" nvidia card was so out of date that it included a coupon for a newer card (that presumably was not reverse-engineered yet).

        I am now using an slightly newer ATI card (Cedar) (acquired second-hand). The free driver does not support tessellation or dashed poly-lines at the moment (and I had not the time to fix that). The supported screen and image resolutions are higher though.

    • (Score: 2) by sudo rm -rf on Tuesday January 19 2016, @10:04AM

      by sudo rm -rf (2357) on Tuesday January 19 2016, @10:04AM (#291483) Journal

      FYI I have three windows boxes. Not counting the 6 server installations I have to use during my day job.

  • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday January 18 2016, @06:46PM

    by Freeman (732) on Monday January 18 2016, @06:46PM (#291195) Journal

    The problem is that every time I compare prices it feels like Intel / Nvidia are trying to rip me off. AMD is still hands down the best bang for your buck. The last computer I built was a Six-Core AMD CPU, 8GB RAM, 512MB VC, 1TB HDD, Blu-Ray Drive, etc that cost $600 a few years ago. I went to price out a new machine and there's not a whole lot of difference. More or less same CPU, same RAM, but updated graphics and a SSD would make it a little more expensive, but still around that $600 to $700 mark. The one thing that is really holding my system back is the lack of a SSD. I already upgraded to a 2GB VC and 16GB of Ram, but at the time all I did was future proof my machine. It didn't actually increase my performance. The lack of a SSD was the bottleneck.

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    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"