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Two big bits of AMD news to share with you this morning, as they appear to be going from strength to strength as a company.

Firstly, this week their financial reports went out and their strong growth has continued. The latest results cover the fourth quarter of last year and the annual results, on the whole they're doing well with around a 50% increase when compared with Q4 in 2018. For 2019 as a whole, they were up about 4% on revenue compared with 2018.

During the conference call following the report, AMD CEO Lisa Su announced (~42:10) that "So in 2019, we launched our new architecture in GPUs. It's the RDNA architecture, and that was the Navi-based products. You should expect that those will be refreshed in 2020, and we'll have a next-generation RDNA architecture that will be part of our 2020 line up.". Su stated that more will be detailed about them "at our financial analyst day" which should be in March. Once the info is out, we will let you know.

A strong AMD is good news for the industry, since it helps keep both Intel and NVIDIA in check on prices and keeps them all pushing technology forwards. It's also great to see AMD aren't slowing down on pushing out more advanced hardware, especially powerful GPUs to compete with NVIDIA.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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29 comments
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Shmerl Jan 30, 2020
That said, GF 14NM process was not as good as TSMC's 16NM, so AMD got huge gains just by moving to TSMC's 7nm. Nvidia will be moving there, potentially this year, but I wouldn't expect it until September at the earliest. AMD should have big Navi release by July at the latest.

Yep, and as you said, while AMD already have quite a bit of experience with 7 nm, Nvidia don't have any yet. 7 nm introduces new physical effects that prevent using old tricks that worked in all previous generations.

So there is a good chance AMD will come out strong with RDNA2 against Nvidia.


Last edited by Shmerl on 30 January 2020 at 7:10 pm UTC
Audi Jan 30, 2020
personally see nvidia launch 7nm gpus before out big navi, maybe in some place around gtc 2020 but only 3070 - 3080

and 3080ti around big navi launch

hopefully amd can make something but for now seems nvidia put a big jump this time (similar to pascal)

however if amd goes bad in gpus, ryzen still saving the day

^_^

Your translation didn't come across too well. I think you were trying to say, that everything depends on how well AMD's "big Navi" performs compared to what Nvidia releases, and when they each end up releasing. And, yes, that is pretty much always the case. Who gets the better card and who gets it out first.

To say though that Turing was a big jump over Pascal, like Pascal was over Maxwell is not accurate. Turing wasn't a big improvement over Pascal. The 2060 performed like a 1070. However, when comparing Pascal to Maxwell, the 1060 performed like the 980 (not the 970). Turing was a small improvement.

If their new line, gives this same small bump again, and AMD provides another big jump like the did with RDNA 1.0 over Vega, then AMD will have a very competitive product, in terms of performance.
mrdeathjr Jan 30, 2020
Your translation didn't come across too well. I think you were trying to say, that everything depends on how well AMD's "big Navi" performs compared to what Nvidia releases, and when they each end up releasing. And, yes, that is pretty much always the case. Who gets the better card and who gets it out first.

To say though that Turing was a big jump over Pascal, like Pascal was over Maxwell is not accurate. Turing wasn't a big improvement over Pascal. The 2060 performed like a 1070. However, when comparing Pascal to Maxwell, the 1060 performed like the 980 (not the 970). Turing was a small improvement.

If their new line, gives this same small bump again, and AMD provides another big jump like the did with RDNA 1.0 over Vega, then AMD will have a very competitive product, in terms of performance.

this time jump seems bigger because use 7nm (7nm EUV) and seems with new arquitecture

in both areas amd give troubles because with actual 7nm dont have same 12nm nvidia tdp

and more important thing if comes with new arquitecture, this have improvements proper of new arquitecture*

*rdna is more or less gcn, no big changes - hopefully amd can offer some better with rdna 2

^_^
Shmerl Jan 30, 2020
*rdna is more or less gcn, no big changes - hopefully amd can offer some better with rdna 2

That's pretty wrong. There are a lot of big changes. And will be even more in RDNA2.
mrboese Jan 30, 2020
I really hope they fix their drivers. I bought an RX5700 and could get the drivers to work OK on Windows, but not on Linux. Massive mouse stuttering, got even worse after using the PPA with updated Mesa.

I decided to switch to team green, where everything worked fine after CLI driver installation (Noveau of course instantly froze on login). My older RX580 worked flawlessly through. I cannot understand why Navi cards still have those driver problems 6 months after launch.
Shmerl Jan 30, 2020
I cannot understand why Navi cards still have those driver problems 6 months after launch.

What kernel are you using that still has Navi problems?


Last edited by Shmerl on 30 January 2020 at 10:18 pm UTC
mrboese Jan 31, 2020
I cannot understand why Navi cards still have those driver problems 6 months after launch.

What kernel are you using that still has Navi problems?

Kernel 5.3 that theoretically should support Navi 10. I checked if AMDGPU was loaded - everything OK. I think the driver has issues with my mixed Hz configuration (1 screen 144Hz, the other 60Hz). There is a bug report of an issue that could be the same as mine: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/amd/issues/1001


Last edited by mrboese on 31 January 2020 at 6:35 pm UTC
Shmerl Jan 31, 2020
Kernel 5.3 that theoretically should support Navi 10.

I'm not surprised you are having issues - 5.3 has a ton of Navi related bugs, there is no reason to use it. Try kernel 5.5.


Last edited by Shmerl on 31 January 2020 at 7:26 pm UTC
Shmerl Jan 31, 2020
Yes but a bad situation for LTS distros which probably most users have due to the risk that rolling releases tend to break more easily (except of openSUSE Tumbleweed of course :-P). I'd wish it would be possible to install the AMDGPU driver also as a Kernel module to older Kernels with out backporting the actual driver from the latest kernles. :/

It is possible to use amdgpu via dkms.

See for example: https://cgit.freedesktop.org/~agd5f/linux/tree/drivers/gpu/drm/amd/dkms?h=amd-19.50

Not sure what exact kernels it supports, I've never used it.

The full list of releases is here: https://cgit.freedesktop.org/~agd5f/linux/refs

Search for something like amd-xx.yy.


Last edited by Shmerl on 31 January 2020 at 9:23 pm UTC
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