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AMD unveils next generation of desktop and netbook CPUs

  • chip
  • The Bulldozer architecture incorporates two complete integer units
  • The Bulldozer architecture incorporates two complete integer units

By Darien Graham-Smith

Posted on 24 Aug 2010 at 05:01

AMD has revealed details of two new CPU architectures, both due to appear in the first half of 2011.

They are the company’s first new architectures since its manufacturing wing was split off to become Global Foundries, leaving AMD a “pure” design company.

The new "Bulldozer" architecture is aimed at desktops and servers. It’s AMD’s first 32nm processor, and the first to use the high-κ metal gate manufacturing process pioneered by Intel in 2007 to keep power consumption low at very small die sizes.

It’s also a first outing for AMD’s new answer to Intel’s Hyper-Threading technology. Each Bulldozer core includes two complete integer units, along with a shared floating-point unit and shared L2 cache memory.

“Integer units are used for the most common compute tasks,” explained senior vice president Chekib Akrout. “I would even say more than 80% of compute tasks and applications use integer units. So it functions like a dual core design, but we don’t replicate everything. We’ve done significant research in analysing workloads to tune what needs to be shared.”

Bulldozer is expected to appear first in conventional CPU packages, then later as part of an “accelerated processing unit”, or “APU”, combining the CPU core and a GPU on a single die.

Lean Bobcat takes on Atom

AMD also revealed its answer to Intel’s Atom processors, a lightweight design dubbed "Bobcat". Unlike Atom, Bobcat offers almost all the features of a desktop processor, including 64-bit operation, virtualisation and instruction set extensions up to SSE3.

It’s also designed with full support for out-of-order execution, something Intel’s Atom lacks.

Pure and simple, from the centre of this machine we do have a significant advantage against Atom

“The machine is capable of ordering instructions in the most efficient way to get the maximum performance — as opposed to an in-order execution machine like Atom,” said Akrout, referring directly to the competition with unusual boldness. “Pure and simple, from the centre of this machine we do have a significant advantage against Atom.”

Despite its sophisticated design, Bobcat promises to draw less than 1W in operation, while offering 90% of the performance of AMD’s current mobile CPUs.

Volume production of Bobcat is set to ramp up at the end of 2010 for a launch early in 2011, as part of AMD’s first APU package. Codenamed "Ontario", it is aimed at netbooks and lightweight notebooks.

“You can see that innovation remains alive and well,” declared Akrout, “in the context of a new and revitalised AMD, built around our focus as a design company.”

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User comments

Looks like my next upgrade will be waiting until I can get my hands on a Bulldozer CPU. Technical specs on AMD's site look promising, will be very interesting to see how it functions in real world scenarios.

By skarlock on 24 Aug 2010

Bring it!

That Bobcat should be out and in test machines/net devices now and ready for release around about now, before schools and Uni's start. Christmas is always nice, but people prefer to buy now, presents later.
Go AMD :) & goodluck

By nicomo on 24 Aug 2010

looking good, hopefully they will make up ground lost to Intel....i'll hold on to my Phenom/Opteron systems for now.

By IainNIX on 25 Aug 2010

Sweet

Looks like they have something new for every market; AMD will be out in force come 2011. Looking forward to getting a low voltage laptop with an APU.

By urmaster on 26 Aug 2010

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