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On December 13th AMD have said they will be showing off more of their new CPU architecture named Zen.

QuoteJoin AMD on December 13th for New Horizon, where the public will experience “Zen” in action for the first time, alongside Geoff Keighley and Evil Geniuses legend PPD. New Horizon will also feature Radeon GPUs in several demos.

Sign up
for the Red Team to learn more about New Horizon and watch the New Horizon livestream here for an exclusive preview of “Zen”. We hope you tune in.


This is exciting, hopefully they don't have any sudden issues. I am really hoping Zen is close to what they have been hyping recently.

This will be the first time the public gets to actually use a Zen chip, so it will be interesting. They will be letting "eSports & Evil Geniuses legend PPD" put it through its paces, I'm not going to pretend I know who that is, should I know? Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: AMD
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
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badber Dec 17, 2016
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: GuestWon't buy a new x86-CPU until they remove their microcode.

Why exactly? CPUs have had microcode basically forever and you've been able to upload new revisions for a long, long time.
Sorry, I meant until they remove their non-free microcode.

What CPUs with free microcode are you using then?
niarbeht Dec 19, 2016
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: GuestWon't buy a new x86-CPU until they remove their microcode.

Why exactly? CPUs have had microcode basically forever and you've been able to upload new revisions for a long, long time.
Sorry, I meant until they remove their non-free microcode.

What CPUs with free microcode are you using then?
for my free system I have an older AMD CPU from 2008 and I have a NanoPi M1 too.

You do realize the AMD chip probably has built-in microcode, but just has no method of updating it, right?
badber Dec 20, 2016
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: GuestWon't buy a new x86-CPU until they remove their microcode.

Why exactly? CPUs have had microcode basically forever and you've been able to upload new revisions for a long, long time.
Sorry, I meant until they remove their non-free microcode.

What CPUs with free microcode are you using then?
for my free system I have an older AMD CPU from 2008 and I have a NanoPi M1 too.

Both of those processors probably have microcode. Also, seems to me like AMD has supported updating the microcode at least from 1999: https://www.dcddcc.com/docs/2014_paper_microcode.pdf
niarbeht Dec 20, 2016
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: GuestWon't buy a new x86-CPU until they remove their microcode.

Why exactly? CPUs have had microcode basically forever and you've been able to upload new revisions for a long, long time.
Sorry, I meant until they remove their non-free microcode.

What CPUs with free microcode are you using then?
for my free system I have an older AMD CPU from 2008 and I have a NanoPi M1 too.

Both of those processors probably have microcode. Also, seems to me like AMD has supported updating the microcode at least from 1999: https://www.dcddcc.com/docs/2014_paper_microcode.pdf

As a sidenote, wasn't the floating-point calculation problem that Pentiums had (y'know, those 90's-era CPUs) caused, and fixed, by microcode?
badber Dec 23, 2016
Quoting: niarbeht
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: badber
Quoting: GuestWon't buy a new x86-CPU until they remove their microcode.

Why exactly? CPUs have had microcode basically forever and you've been able to upload new revisions for a long, long time.
Sorry, I meant until they remove their non-free microcode.

What CPUs with free microcode are you using then?
for my free system I have an older AMD CPU from 2008 and I have a NanoPi M1 too.

Both of those processors probably have microcode. Also, seems to me like AMD has supported updating the microcode at least from 1999: https://www.dcddcc.com/docs/2014_paper_microcode.pdf

As a sidenote, wasn't the floating-point calculation problem that Pentiums had (y'know, those 90's-era CPUs) caused, and fixed, by microcode?

Seems like the FDIV bug wouldn't have been fixable with just updateable microcode according to this: https://www.ele.uva.es/~jesman/BigSeti/ftp/Cajon_Desastre/MPR/111204.pdf
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The comments on this article are closed.