Same peak, lower average is what I’ve understood so far. At least as far as Valve has described it to tech press.
Same peak, lower average is what I’ve understood so far. At least as far as Valve has described it to tech press.
How it fits into your report I’ll leave to you so I won’t answer your question directly, but I’ll give you some context on what the acquisition is for.
So when you look at product markets, Xilinx and AMD are very different. They’re both focused on totally different markets. However, there’s a lot of technical expertise at Xilinx and AMD that both companies can use - there’s a lot of overlap.
Firstly: engineering talent. While Xilinx specialise in FPGAs, they are very leading edge when it comes to working with advanced packaging techniques, which we’ve also seen AMD take advantage of significantly (X3D, MI300). So there’s an overlap here which both companies can take advantage of.
Second up: product IP and software development. You’ve probably recently heard of Ryzen AI, right? That block on the newest mobile Ryzen APUs called the AI Engine is developed by Xilinx - or well it’s their IP I mean. There are instances like this where the two companies can utilise the others IP to improve upon their own products as well.
Probably because it hits a higher frame rate.
The higher you go, the more CPU you need, and the more CPU you need, the less power and memory bandwidth you have for the iGPU.
Bingo. The Steam Deck OLED’s SoC seems to have cut out the Cadence DSPs, which we can see with the significantly smaller SoC (especially when combined with the new process node).
Pretty sure VGH also has more PCIe lanes on die as well, alongside full size Zen 2 cores (all console variants have a cut FPU).