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Radeon HD 7950 Reference Design Pictured

Radeon HD 7950 Reference Design Pictured

Posted on Jan 27, 2012 by MG1

It looks like Radeon HD 7970 and HD 7950 won't share a common design after all, as press-shots of the HD 7950 suggest. The HD 7950 is also said to use a different PCB design from the HD 7970, diminishing any chance of the HD 7950 being "unlockable" to HD 7970 using a BIOS update. The reference design card uses a cost-effective heatsink with internal ventilation using a top-flow fan, and not a fin-canal design the HD 7970 uses, which pushes hot air out of the case.

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AMD reports flat revenues and loss for fall 2011

AMD reports flat revenues and loss for fall 2011

Posted on Jan 26, 2012 by MG3

Filed in: AMD

AMD has reported its financial results for the fourth quarter and for 2011. Annual income was $6.57 billion, up two percent, while quarterly income was a flat $1.69 billion as compared to last year. Net income was $358 billion for the year, while for the quarter, the company reported a loss of $177 million.

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Android 4.0 runs on an AMD tablet

Android 4.0 runs on an AMD tablet

Posted on Jan 25, 2012 by MG3

We just remembered there was one last curiosity we saw at AMD's suite at CES 2012: this AMD Fusion tablet, running Android 4.0. Before you get too excited, AMD was quick to point out that this MSI WindPad 110W didn't get Ice Cream Sandwich through any effort of its own. What you're looking at is actually the work of the Android-x86 project, which very recently released a test Android 4.0 ISO for AMD Brazos-based tablets like the one above.

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AMD Aims to Undercut Intel with Ultrabook Alternative

AMD Aims to Undercut Intel with Ultrabook Alternative

Posted on Jan 18, 2012 by MG3

Filed in: CPUIntelAMD

The message at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this year was loud and clear: Ultrabooks are here to stay. Intel finds itself in similar territory after spearheading the once hugely popular netbook market, and so does AMD, which has a chance to take a mulligan and do things differently this time. AMD waited too long to get into netbook alternatives, and this time around, the Sunnyvale chip maker doesn't want history to repeat itself.

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AMD Radeon HD 7950 released in two weeks

AMD Radeon HD 7950 released in two weeks

Posted on Jan 17, 2012 by MG15

AMD is planning to unveil its Radeon HD 7950 graphics card by the end of January, while NVIDIA is anticipated to introduce its 28nm Kepler GPU in April, at the latest. The sources noted that Nvidia wishes to make sure that the power consumption and the manufacturing process of the graphics chip all reach perfection before entering the 28nm generation. Since Nvidia is set to release its 28nm graphics card around the same time as Intel's upcoming 22nm Ivy Bridge processor, the sources believe Kepler series GPUs may have a chance to catch up with the demand for Intel's new CPUs.

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AMD previews Trinity APU for ultraportables

AMD previews Trinity APU for ultraportables

Posted on Jan 17, 2012 by MG15

Filed in: CPUAMD

f Intel is right about the high percentage of new PCs bought that will be Ultrabooks – and the $300 million it's putting behind the Ultrabook concept should help with that – AMD needs a processor to put in budget thin and light notebooks as well. That's what the next-generation Trinity APU is designed for. We were first shown the chip at Computex 2011, but AMD showed us it running in a back room at CES 2012. At first it looked like AMD was demonstrating a beefy desktop processor in a large gaming rig, playing a DirectX 11 game on one screen and transcoding video for iPad resolution on another. But then AMD's Ron Myers cracked open the case to show the notebook that was actually doing the wor...

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AMD Demonstrates Trinity APU, Its Own Thunderbolt-Alternative

AMD Demonstrates Trinity APU, Its Own Thunderbolt-Alternative

Posted on Jan 11, 2012 by MG15

Filed in: AMD

AMD's next-generation accelerated processing unit (APU), codenamed "Trinity", was demonstrated at CES. Trinity will make up AMD's 2012 A-Series APU lineup, and will be designed for mainstream-thru-performance notebooks, and mainstream desktops (different standards for different form-factors). Pictured below is what its notebook-specific BGA package looks like. The package has an exposed rectangular die, with a stabilizer frame around it (like with GPUs). Notebooks' cooling assembly heat pipes make direct contact with the die. Trinity packs two Piledriver modules (an evolution of Bulldozer), and DirectX 11.1 AMD Radeon HD 7000M graphics (notebook APU) or HD 7000D (desktop APU).

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Maingear says it will offer the AMD Radeon HD 7970 in its Shift, F131 and Vybe desktops

Maingear says it will offer the AMD Radeon HD 7970 in its Shift, F131 and Vybe desktops

Posted on Jan 09, 2012 by MG3

When AMD announced its latest flagship, the Radeon HD 7970, we knew it was fast and efficient (because reviewers said so!), but gamers were told they'd have to wait until the new year to try it themselves. Now, precisely on schedule, the card is available for purchase, and we're starting to hear word of systems that will be refreshed to include the 28nm card. Maingear just said that it will offer the 7970 inside its Shift and F131 desktops, followed by the Vybe at some later date. If you recall, the card has a 925MHz engine that can be overclocked to 1.1GHz, 2,048 stream processors and an unusual 384-bit memory bus serving 3GB of GDDR5 -- not to mention, it's capable of a mere 3W power draw ...

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AMD Radeon HD 7970 Now For Sale

AMD Radeon HD 7970 Now For Sale

Posted on Jan 09, 2012 by MG3

Although they're not officially supposed to go on sale until tomorrow, Newegg already has their selection of 7970s up for sale this evening. Newegg has cards from all of AMD's major North American partners, including HIS, Gigabyte, XFX, Asus, Sapphire, and PowerColor. Most of them are at the AMD MSRP of $549, though the Asus card is $589, and XFX's custom cooled and overclocked model is at $599.

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Four Radeon HD 7970s cooled with liquid nitrogen en route to crazy benchmark scores

Four Radeon HD 7970s cooled with liquid nitrogen en route to crazy benchmark scores

Posted on Jan 06, 2012 by MG3

What do you get when you take four of the fastest single-GPU graphics cards on the market, add a little liquid nitrogen, connect them to two 1,200W power supplies, and crank them to 1.6GHz each? The answer is Andre's monstrous "quad seventy-nine seventy" rig, pictured above. The AMD Radeon HD 7970 cards already feature an impressive clock speed of 925 MHz, and while AMD has said they can be pushed safely over 1GHz, overclocking them by almost 75 percent will get you some truly staggering benchmark performance.

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Report: Quanta sues AMD over faulty chips

Report: Quanta sues AMD over faulty chips

Posted on Jan 05, 2012 by MG3

Filed in: NotebooksNECAMD

Quanta Computer has filed a lawsuit in a California court against Advanced Micro Devices over faulty chips used in some computers, an accusation disputed by AMD.
Quanta has accused AMD and its ATI Technologies subsidiary of selling chips that could not tolerate some heat levels, making the chips unfit for use in some NEC laptops manufactured by Quanta, according to a news report by Bloomberg. The faulty chips caused the NEC laptops to malfunction, the suit claims.

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AMD denies hidden cores in Radeon HD 7970

AMD denies hidden cores in Radeon HD 7970

Posted on Jan 05, 2012 by MG3

A leaked Sapphire document revealed a Tahiti GPU with 2304 cores. AMD however confirms that there are no hidden cores. The chip has 2048 shaders, so the 2304 number from Sapphire is likely a mistake, or part of a test by AMD to find out which partners leak specifications to members of the press.

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AMD Radeon HD 7770 Pics, Specs and Benchmarks Leaked

AMD Radeon HD 7770 Pics, Specs and Benchmarks Leaked

Posted on Jan 04, 2012 by MG3

Filed in: Graphic CardsAMD

ChipHell forum member bigpao007 has leaked some pictures and 3DMark results of the upcoming HD 7770. The HD 7770 is set between the current HD 6800 and HD 6700 series in AMD's graphics platform and is a more "budget" friendly GPU compared to the HD 7900 series. The GPU uses the new 28nm Cape Verde Southern Islands featuring the Graphics Core Next architecture.

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HD 7970 Overclocked to 1.26 GHz: 28 nm Tech Really Stretches Its Legs

HD 7970 Overclocked to 1.26 GHz: 28 nm Tech Really Stretches Its Legs

Posted on Jan 03, 2012 by MG1

It looks like the new AMD Radeon HD 7970 could be a bit of a dark horse and a lot more potent than its stock specifications would suggest – excellent for creating a competitive graphics card market. The reviews at stock speeds show the flagship HD 7970 to be around 10-15% faster than NVIDIA's flagship GTX 580, which doesn't seem all that impressive since the GTX 580 has been on the market for over a year now. However, what the reviews haven't really shown, is what kind of an overclocking monster the HD 7970 is. It definitely looks like AMD could have easily beaten the GTX 580 by a much bigger margin than they did, had they wanted to and it makes one wonder why they didn't.
VR-Zone have spent...

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Cost-Effective Radeon HD 7900 PCB Already In The Works

Cost-Effective Radeon HD 7900 PCB Already In The Works

Posted on Dec 21, 2011 by MG15

Filed in: Graphic CardsAMD

A little earlier today, we showed you pictures of AMD's first Radeon HD 7900 series single-GPU PCB that makes use of digital-PWM power delivery. Some of the first batches of Radeon HD 7900 graphics cards will stick to that PCB and board design, as it's backed by AMD's engineering. Even as the SKU's launch is less than 24 hours away, there are pictures of AMD's cost-effective Radeon HD 7900 PCB surfacing on Asian media sites. Once ready, AMD add-in board partners can opt for this cost-effective PCB if they want to fine-tune their prices. It looks like AMD is ready well ahead to face competition from NVIDIA, with its GeForce Kepler 104 (GK104) GPU.

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