



*Turbo Core kicks in when 3 or more cores (on a 6-core part) are idle,
*the frequency of those three cores is reduced to 800MHz, the voltage to the entire chip is increased,
*the remaining three cores are turboed up by as much as 500MHz.
...link
...linkAMD shipping Fusion Llano samples
The first two Fusion products - Llano and Ontario - are well on track for production by end 2010, with release scheduled for early 2011.
Llano is basically a 32nm APU which combines four Phenom II cores with 400 DX11 SPs from the HD 5000 family, for a powerful mainstream CPU+GPU solution.
Basically, what we are looking at is a HD 5670 type GPU and a Phenom II quad core CPU in one die - a remarkable achievement.
Llano will be dual, triple of quad core products, with TDP ranging from 20W to 59W - aimed at notebooks, part of the Sabine platforms.
Desktop oriented Llano APUs will fill the Lynx platform, and TDPs can be expected to be higher.
Of course, the entire die is fabricated at the 32nm SOI process - including the GPU part.
In addition to Llano comes the power efficient Ontario part, based on a new architecture - Bobcat.
It will be a dual core CPU, with AMD claiming "90% of mainstream performance" at under 10W TDP and half the die size.
AMD's first fusion part, Llano, is on track for an early 2011 release, right alongside Intel's Sandy Bridge.
Ontario will also release in early 2011.
Interestingly, there is no new of AMD's next-generation Bulldozer CPUs, which are still on schedule for a vague release timeline of "2011"...
Ale ej, nneí to zas tak dávno, co se o Bulldozeru mluvilo, samply již se chystají také k zaslání. Jen si myslím, že veškeré informace o Bulldozeru se drží co nejvíc pod pokličkou.Julius napísal:...linkAMD shipping Fusion Llano samples
The first two Fusion products - Llano and Ontario - are well on track for production by end 2010, with release scheduled for early 2011.
Llano is basically a 32nm APU which combines four Phenom II cores with 400 DX11 SPs from the HD 5000 family, for a powerful mainstream CPU+GPU solution.
Basically, what we are looking at is a HD 5670 type GPU and a Phenom II quad core CPU in one die - a remarkable achievement.
Llano will be dual, triple of quad core products, with TDP ranging from 20W to 59W - aimed at notebooks, part of the Sabine platforms.
Desktop oriented Llano APUs will fill the Lynx platform, and TDPs can be expected to be higher.
Of course, the entire die is fabricated at the 32nm SOI process - including the GPU part.
In addition to Llano comes the power efficient Ontario part, based on a new architecture - Bobcat.
It will be a dual core CPU, with AMD claiming "90% of mainstream performance" at under 10W TDP and half the die size.
AMD's first fusion part, Llano, is on track for an early 2011 release, right alongside Intel's Sandy Bridge.
Ontario will also release in early 2011.
Interestingly, there is no new of AMD's next-generation Bulldozer CPUs, which are still on schedule for a vague release timeline of "2011"...
...link