Hynix anuncia memorias GDDR6 proximamente [y Micron se sube al tren]

Hynix haciendo eco a la declaracion en samsung, anuncia que dentro de tres meses se tendran chips de memoria GDDR6. Esperadas originalmente para 2014/2015 han tardado en llegar pero ya estan aqui.

hilo_y-ahora-tambien-hablan-de-memoria-hbm3-hbm2-y-gddr6_2084485
hilo_samsung-anuncia-chips-gddr6-para-2018_2258006

Imagen

Imagen

Lo malo es que costaran ~20% mas que las actuales GDDR5, pero las ventajas que ofrece seguro compensan esa diferencia de precuio inicial.


https://www.gamersnexus.net/industry/32 ... production
GDDR6 Slated for Next-Gen nVidia GPUs, Mass Production in 3 Months
By Steve Burke


At GTC 2018, we learned that SK Hynix’s GDDR6 memory is bound for mass production in 3 months, and will be featured on several upcoming nVidia products. Some of these include autonomous vehicle components, but we also learned that we should expect GDDR6 on most, if not all, of nVidia’s upcoming gaming architecture cards.

Given a mass production timeline of June-July for GDDR6 from SK Hynix, assuming Hynix is a launch-day memory provider, we can expect next-generation GPUs to become available after this timeframe. There still needs to be enough time to mount the memory to the boards, after all. We don’t have a hard date for when the next-generation GPU lineup will ship, but from this information, we can assume it’s at least 3 months away -- possibly more. Basically, what we know is that, assuming Hynix is a launch vendor, new GPUs are nebulously >3 months away.

..

This is all assuming that our contact at the show provided us accurate information, granted. We presently have no reason to doubt the information we were provided. Straight from the source, Hynix enters MP on GDDR6 within 3 months. GDDR6 will also be on future nVidia GPUs. The big question is when those come – we’d peg it as July or later, right now. 2H18, hopefully. This enters territory of speculation and is not as informed as other information in this post, but the RTX Volta support addition to Unreal Engine 4.20, due in July, plus MP of GDDR6 in June-July, we think indicates ramp-up for a GPU launch sometime thereafter. NVidia has previously launched GPUs toward the end of summer.

As for other specifications, Hynix’s GDDR6 will run a 180 ball-grid array from GDDR5’s 170 BGA, enabling greater throughput from the extra pins. Hynix’s GDDR6 will operate upwards of 16Gb/s and ship in 8Gb and 16Gb densities, up from 8Gb densities only on GDDR5. Hynix’s GDDR6 should pull 1.35V and operate at lower power consumption targets, but we don’t have exact numbers right now.

That’s what we’ve got for now. Note that these are facts gathered by GamersNexus at GTC 2018.
TRASTARO escribió:...
GDDR6 Slated for Next-Gen nVidia GPUs, Mass Production in 3 Months
By Steve Burke


...

Entonces para septiembre deberíamos ver nueva gen de nvidia...
¿Cuándo salen?, y si salen, saldrán placas bases nuevas, etc, etc.
Si las actuales valen 600 estas valdrán 800 [qmparto]
hbm es el futuro hasta nvidia abordo esa plataforma con volta
CannonlakeEvo está baneado por "Troll"
Cómo me gustaría ver un salto grande en rendimiento por watt.

Potencia hay bastante ya.
El gran problema de HBM es la falta de produccion, porque etoy de acuerdo que HBM ya deberia ser el presente
Micron tambien anuncia sus chips GDDR6, las cuales revasarian el estandar establecido por JEDEC de 14Gbps, pues presumen sus chips alcanzarian hasta 20Gbps.

https://fudzilla.com/news/graphics/4644 ... dr6-memory

Micron talks 20Gbps GDDR6 memory
With a slight voltage bump

It appears that Micron will easily extend from its JEDEC 14Gbps transfer speed as, according to Micron, it can hit as high as 20Gbps with a slight voltage bump.

According to Micron's research paper, conveniently titled "16Gb/s and Beyond with SingleEnded I/O in High-Performance Graphics Memory", GDDR6 memory can easily scale as to speeds of 16.5Gbps and with "small, but helpful, boost in I/O voltage", it can go as high 20Gbps, at least on paper.

According to the paper, the 16.5Gbps result demonstrates full DRAM functionality that could be capped by timing limitations in the memory array itself and the 20Gbps speeds were achieved by placing it into a special mode of operation which uses only the I/O while bypasses the memory array.

While we won't see 20Gbps GDDR6 memory anytime soon, 14Gbps, 16Gbps, and the 18Gbps GDDR6 chips, recently announced by Samsung, will certainly provide a significant performance improvement for the next-generation graphics cards.

Hopefully, we will hear more about those next-generation consumer/gaming graphics cards soon but according to recent details, this won't be happening anytime soon.


.
Mientras tanto la compañia Xilinx ayudara a AMD con impulsar el uso de chips HBM2.

https://www.fudzilla.com/news/ai/46555- ... with-hbm-2
Xilinx helped AMD with HBM 2
by Fuad Abazovic


High bandwidth is the key

There is an interesting story that's very little known about the public cooperation that has happened between AMD and Xilinx about HBM memory.

Our well-informed sources have confirmed that the two companies have been cooperating for years on the next generation memory interfaces. We were told that Xilinx worked closely and helped AMD with some of its HBM and HBM 2 obstacles as apparently both companies were after the same goal.

Increasing the memory bandwidth is the key for both computer graphics that AMD is perusing and for deep learning, high quality video processing and AI that both companies are now after. Stacking memory chips to increase the bandwidth was no walk in the park and both companies worked together to fix the obstacles.

Last year AMD released its HBM 2 powered Vega chips and Xilinx released HBM 2 based Virtex UltraScale+ that also uses the same memory. Back in February, Xilinx released a video of the Virtex UltraScale+ VU37P FPGA device co packaged with HBM 2. The video shows VU37P operating at full speed 460 GB/s error free over 32 channels on the first day of silicon bring up.
Xilinx VU37P largest and fastest FPGA with HBM 2

The Xilinx VU37P is currently the world’s largest and fastest HBM-enabled FPGA featuring2.9M System Logic Cells, 341Mb of on-chip SRAM, 28TOP/s DSP performance, and 96 transceivers (32.75G).

Xilinx also announced Project Everest 7nm HBM enabled ACAP adaptive computer acceleration platform that is designed to address future workloads including some impressive performance increases up to 20-fold for the deep neural networks. The future according to Xilinx is in the heterogeneous computing, the same vision that was many times described to Fudzilla by the CTO of AMD.

A few months back, Fudzilla managed to chat separately with both the CEO of Xilinx Victor Peng and CTO of AMD Mark Papermaster about the next generation data sets. Both agree that the future is heterogeneous and that you need fast memory and interconnects to keep the computer units busy.

This is why it doesn’t really comes as a big surprise that both companies cooperated on some important technologies such as HBM 2.0.
CEO of Xilinx was CVP of Silicon at AMD

Let me remind you that the CEO of Xilinx - Victor Peng - used to be a VP of silicon engineering at ATI and later AMD and worked as a Corporate VP of Silicon engineering for GPG between 2006 and 2008, so he is aware of the graphics workloads data sets and its memory needs.

Interestingly enough, the Nvidia Volta generation of accelerators uses HBM 2.0 since this is the best and fastest memory around especially for deep learning and artificial intelligence related data sets.

The future for Xilinx, Nvidia and AMD definitely carries the HBM 3 and beyond but this memory is not expected before 2019/2020. Whenever it comes to market it should end up with two times or faster speeds of HBM 2.

One thing that we learned at Fudzilla after our combined decade of involvement in this industry. There is no such thing as a too fast processor and you always need more and faster memory, today and in the future.

.
Por favor, @TRASTARO, dejando de lado el interés que puede tener copiapegar una nota de prensa, EOL es un foro de habla hispana. No vuelvas a reproducir íntegros pasajes en inglés de notas de prensa ni artículos.
9 respuestas