Originally posted by oooverclocker
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Radeon Vega 12 Support Called For Pulling Into Linux 4.17 Kernel
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Originally posted by nanonyme View PostIt's not like history has taught you to expect sense from marketing names
I'm also a little surprised that so many companies allow it to happen. Here are some of the negative consequences for them that I can think of:- Beauty. There is a kind-of beauty to consistency and patterns. Inconsistent/weird naming reduces beauty.
- Familiarity. Customers who get to know a company can gain a greater sense of understanding of past, current and future products if consistent & logical naming is used.
- Communication improvements. Tech support and even sales depts should have an easier time talking about products with customers and even internally if the naming is sane. If the naming uses consecutive numbers or dates, you can even know something about the chronological ordering of products just from their name.
- Customer satisfaction. I don't know how many people there are like me, but I for one am always frustrated by insane naming schemes. They worsen my image of the product & the company. It makes them appear foolish, disorganised and unprofessional; especially so when it comes to electronics products.
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I would consider a Vega 10 (64 CU-Vega) refresh advertised as 12nm with slightly higher boost.
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Originally posted by cybertraveler View PostIt seems my confusion is partly because of more marketing team, naming insanity. Thanks for the clarifications.
If there new products are replacements for the RX 560 series, then the crypto currency mining industry is probably going to buy up these cards extremely quickly. The RX 580 is pretty popular for mining. A company even recently started selling home heaters which each contain two RX 580s:
https://www.qarnot.com/crypto-heater_qc1/
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It seems my confusion is partly because of more marketing team, naming insanity. Thanks for the clarifications.
If there new products are replacements for the RX 560 series, then the crypto currency mining industry is probably going to buy up these cards extremely quickly. The RX 580 is pretty popular for mining. A company even recently started selling home heaters which each contain two RX 580s:
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Originally posted by cybertraveler View Post
There is a wikipedia page that states that "Vega 11" chips are found in some Desktop Ryzen CPUs:
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There are two numbering schemes, the first is similar to the Polaris 10,11,12,20 naming scheme:
Vega10 - large standalone GPU product family
Vega11 - Disappeared, or maybe the SKU in the Intel CPU+GPU package
Vega12 - the GPU in the story, again a family of products (apparently verified from AMD not to be the SKU in the Intel chip)
and then there are the marketing names:
Vega 64 - Vega10
Vega 56 - Vega10
Vega 11 - Ryzen APU
Vega 10 - Ryzen APU
Vega 8 - Ryzen APU
Vega 3 - Ryzen APU
So not ideal. I guess it's a 24-36 CU standalone GPU to replace Polaris20 (RX 580, RX 570), i.e., RX 680, RX 670.
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Is there any good info out there on what the "Vega 12" products will be? I've been searching and can't find anything.
The Vega 56 and Vega 64 apparently have "Vega 10" chips in them:
There is a wikipedia page that states that "Vega 11" chips are found in some Desktop Ryzen CPUs:
Is there any chance that the Vega 12 chips will be used in a new range of discrete graphics cards announced or released in 2018?
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