AMD has posted a video on YouTube of their Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition being overclocked on air, dry ice and Liquid Nitrogen. The processor is overclocked by Chew*.
Chew* spent three weeks tirelessly overclocking stock AMD Phenom II X4 955 BE processors and recently published his results spanning air, phase, dry ice, and liquid nitrogen. He pushes DDR3 and the extraordinary north bridge of the 955 to the limit. The stock 955 has tremendous north bridge scaling potential and achieved overclocks at significantly lower voltages than prior processor models. Gigabyte and OCZ provided additional support.
The Proving Grounds on Youtube in HD : http://links.amd.com/PROVINGGROUNDS
The Proving Grounds on Youtube in Standard Definition: http://links.amd.com/SDPROVINGGROUNDS
Result Summary :
AMD Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition CPU ”Dragon” Technology
Overclocker Brian Mclachlan / chew*
#2 3DMark06 23,883
Single ATI Radeon HD 4890 Class
#1 3DMark06 28,831
Dual ATI Radeon HD 4850 Class
#1 3DMark06 Score 32,281
Dual ATI Radeon HD 4890 Class
Results on DDR3
DDR3 5-5-5-15-20 At 1443 Mhz
DDR3 6-6-6-16-22 At 1636 Mhz
Results on Air
4515 Mhz All Core Validation
4070 Mhz Extreme Stability CPU 1.50V
Results on Dry Ice
5217 Mhz All Core Validation
4717 Mhz Extreme Stability CPU 1.60V
Results on Liquid Nitrogen
6405 Mhz All Core Validation
6283 Mhz Benchmark PI 1M (6283) 11.078 DDR3 9-9-9 1700
5751 Mhz Extreme Stablity CPU 1.80V
MA790FX-UD5P DDR2 Motherboard
MA790FXT-UDP5 DDR3 Motherboard
Saturday, May 9, 2009
Friday, May 1, 2009
AMD Marks its 40th Year as a Technology Innovator

May 1, 2009 will mark the official 40-year anniversary of AMD’s founding by Jerry Sanders and seven co-founders in 1969. As part of the year-long anniversary celebration, the company is holding a series of contests in the U.S. and Canada as a gesture of thanks to the dedicated customers who have been, and continue to be, key to AMD’s critical presence in the processor industry.
As a central hub for the contests and information about AMD’s history, the company also launched a site dedicated to the 40th anniversary, with a complete timeline of AMD milestones and full details about the upcoming contests. In coming weeks the site is also expected to feature employee and customer-generated anniversary content.
“Forty years in any industry is a major achievement, but doing so in the rapidly changing, competitive semiconductor business is an enduring testament to the dedication and talent of AMD employees and alumni,” said Dirk Meyer, AMD president and CEO. “As the world and technology markets have changed through the years, AMD has remained focused on enabling the next wave of applications that we expect to drive the industry. We mark our 40th year as a much different company; a company intensely focused on designing and developing new products and platforms that combine our unique graphics and microprocessor technologies to create compelling user experiences.”
During the past 40 years, AMD transformed itself from a second-source supplier that worked within the confines of other companies’ designs to a widely recognized innovation leader that has driven the market and kept competition alive in one of the world’s most important technology sectors. AMD takes great pride in the role of igniting next-generation technology solutions, as well as the ability to see where customer and end-user needs are headed next and then collaborate with the industry accordingly.
Unique “Fusion” Business Philosophy
AMD’s unique “Fusion” business philosophy is a key part of what sets us apart from competitors. Fusion is the competitive differentiator that enables AMD to consistently deliver relevant, breakthrough innovation … time and time again. Fusion marries innovation with collaboration. Far more than just the convergence of microprocessor and graphics technologies, Fusion is the process by which AMD and its technology partners can ignite next-generation solutions that change the way people work, live and play through an adaptive combination of technology integration, customer intimacy and industry impact. Fusion is the process where customer needs and desires can bond with AMD’s own engineering passion and unique capabilities. To learn more about innovation and the next generation of breakthroughs, visit http://fusion.amd.com/.
Giving Back
In the past 40 years, users and enthusiasts the world over have been integral in the development and marketplace adoption of AMD products. To thank AMD users and celebrate the anniversary, beginning today, AMD is launching a series of contests in the coming months to give back to its dedicated fans. In total, the contests will give away 80 prizes, and the lucky winners will take home some of the most innovative AMD products on the market today.
The first contest, beginning today, is aimed at the AMD enthusiast community who rely on AMD products for their graphics and processing needs. For this contest, participants who submit brief, creative videos wishing AMD a happy birthday can be entered for a chance to win one of AMD’s award-winning graphics cards that have received numerous positive reviews from top-notch enthusiast outlets such as Hot Hardware and HardOCP. The qualified entrants who submit the three best videos will be eligible to receive an ATI Radeon™ HD 4890 graphic card and 40 additional runners up will be eligible to receive an ATI Radeon HD 4650 Radeon graphics card.
Alternatively, fans can show off their AMD pride by submitting photos showing off how much they love AMD products. The top five submissions from eligible participants will win AMD’s fastest quad-core processor ever, the AMD Phenom™ II X4 955 Black Edition processor, which helps users unleash the maximum potential of their PCs by providing superior performance and efficiency at a price that’s hard to beat (AMD SSBP is $245). In addition, eight other qualified participants will be eligible to receive an AMD Athlon™ 7850 processor, which gives users the performance they need to help maximize productivity and enhance their digital entertainment experience.
AMD will kick off two additional contests later this year, which are planned to give fans the opportunity to win AMD-powered notebook computers as well as popular gaming consoles like the ATI graphics-equipped Nintendo Wii and Xbox 360.
Please visit the AMD 40th anniversary website for full contest rules and details: www.amd.com/40years
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
AMD Launches the ATI Radeon™ HD 4770

AMD today launched the ATI Radeon™ HD 4770 graphics processor, a groundbreaking product that harnesses the state-of-the-art 40 nanometer manufacturing process for the desktop PC market, delivering best-in-class performance and energy efficiency at anticipated launch prices as low as $99.
“Consumer pressure in this economic downturn is shifting demand to lower prices and the price band around $100 has the highest demand and highest volume,” said Rick Bergman, senior vice president and general manager, Graphics Products Group, AMD. “AMD has responded with the launch of the ATI Radeon HD 4770, targeting this market with cutting-edge technologies like 40 nm processors, support for DirectX 10.1 gaming and GDDR5 memory."
The card performs better than Geforce 9800GT and it's slightly slower than the Radeon HD 4850, but at the same time, it runs cooler than the HD 4850. It is a dual slot graphics card and it has an external power connector, but the best attribute will definitely be the performance you get for the price.
Reviews:
AMDZone
X-Bit Labs
Supporting Resources:
· Video: ATI Radeon HD 4770 product features
· Video: What gamers are saying about the ATI Radeon HD 4770
Thursday, April 23, 2009
AMD releases new Phenom II X4 945 and 955 BE

AMD will now refresh the lineup with two new processors: the Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition and Phenom II X4 945. Both processors are modestly priced, with the Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition at $245, and the Phenom II X4 945 at $225.
The 955 Black Edition and the 945 are clocked at 3.2GHz and 3.0GHz, respectively. Black Edition processors have unlocked multipliers to make overclocking easier for PC enthusiasts. The processors differ only in clock speed, and have identical specifications otherwise. The Phenom II X4 processors will come with 64K of L1 instruction and 64K of L1 data cache per core (512KB total L1 per processor), 512KB of L2 data cache per core (2MB total L2 per processor), and will also have a shared 6MB L3 cache.
The two new processors are based on AMD's AM3 socket but will also work in most AM2+ motherboards. Because they support both sockets, the processors also support both DDR2 and DDR3 memory, respectively found in AM2+ and AM3 socket based motherboards. Using DDR2 the processors will have 17.1GB/s of memory bandwidth, and using DDR3 the bandwidth jumps up to 21.1GB/s. Older Phenom II X4 processors, like the 940 Black Edition and the 920, use AMD's AM2+ socket.
The Web site Ripping.org notes that hobbyists with early access to the X4 955 BE chip have been able to clock it at up to 6.7 GHz.
Below are the reviews we found on web:
AMDZone
PC Perspective
Firing Squad
Tech Report
AnandTech
Thursday, April 2, 2009
ATI Radeon HD 4890
AMD today introduced the ATI Radeon™ HD 4890 graphics card, driven by the world’s most powerful graphics processor . The newest addition to the award-winning ATI Radeon™ HD 4000 series boasts a whopping 1.36 TeraFLOPs of compute power, superior GDDR5 memory, and super-high engine clock speeds capable of nearly 1GHz. The advanced design of the ATI Radeon HD 4890 delivers the best game experience in its class, including the latest ground-breaking DirectX® 10.1 titles. In addition, with the introduction of the ATI Radeon HD 4890, AMD continues to enhance its “Dragon” desktop platform technology, designed to provide exceptional value to OEMs, channel partners, and do-it-yourself (DIY) consumers.

The ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics card continues AMD’s proud tradition of technology leadership with support for the latest DirectX 10.1 games, including Ubisoft’s Tom Clancy’s H.A.W.X.™, Electronic Art’s BattleForge™ and SEGA’s Stormrise™ released last month, as well as GSC Gameworld’s S.T.A.L.K.E.R: Clear
Sky. When compared to DirectX 10 game play, DirectX 10.1 games have proven to deliver higher game performance and an improved visual experience.
The ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics card is supported by a dozen add-in-board companies offering a variety of custom board and cooling solutions. Partners include ASUS, Club 3D, Diamond Multimedia, Force3D, GECUBE, GIGABYTE, HIS (Hightech Information Systems), Jetway, MSI, Palit Multimedia, PowerColor, SAPPHIRE Technology, VisionTek and XFX. It is available immediately for $249 MSRP (USD), and priced at select etailers as low as $229 (USD) after mail-in rebate.
For more information, visit www.amd.com/radeon4890/presskit
Check out the supporting videos for the new ATI Radeon HD 4890:
DirectX 10.1: What the Experts Say
Experience The DirectX 10.1 Difference
Dr. Jon Peddie’s Thoughts On The Future of Discrete Graphics and the Video Game Market
The Making of an ATI Graphics Card

The ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics card continues AMD’s proud tradition of technology leadership with support for the latest DirectX 10.1 games, including Ubisoft’s Tom Clancy’s H.A.W.X.™, Electronic Art’s BattleForge™ and SEGA’s Stormrise™ released last month, as well as GSC Gameworld’s S.T.A.L.K.E.R: Clear
Sky. When compared to DirectX 10 game play, DirectX 10.1 games have proven to deliver higher game performance and an improved visual experience.
The ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics card is supported by a dozen add-in-board companies offering a variety of custom board and cooling solutions. Partners include ASUS, Club 3D, Diamond Multimedia, Force3D, GECUBE, GIGABYTE, HIS (Hightech Information Systems), Jetway, MSI, Palit Multimedia, PowerColor, SAPPHIRE Technology, VisionTek and XFX. It is available immediately for $249 MSRP (USD), and priced at select etailers as low as $229 (USD) after mail-in rebate.
For more information, visit www.amd.com/radeon4890/presskit
Check out the supporting videos for the new ATI Radeon HD 4890:
DirectX 10.1: What the Experts Say
Experience The DirectX 10.1 Difference
Dr. Jon Peddie’s Thoughts On The Future of Discrete Graphics and the Video Game Market
The Making of an ATI Graphics Card
Thursday, March 19, 2009
My baby Vic has been born
Dear all, just FYI and to share our happiness, wanna inform you that my firstborn son, ‘Vic Marcell Wu’ has been born on March 19, 2009 at 8:35 AM. Weight 2.8 kg and length 49 cm.
Here are some of his early photos :-)
First Day :

Day 2 :

Day 3 :

Also check out my Photo Album on Friendster specially dedicated to my little boy.
Here are some of his early photos :-)
First Day :

Day 2 :

Day 3 :

Also check out my Photo Album on Friendster specially dedicated to my little boy.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Intel and AMD in licensing dispute
Intel has formally accused AMD of breaching the two companies' 2001 cross-licensing agreement.
Here's why Intel thinks AMD is breaching the agreement:
Intel believes that Global Foundries is not a subsidiary under terms of the agreement and is therefore not licensed under the 2001 patent cross-license agreement. Intel also said the structure of the deal between AMD and ATIC breaches a confidential portion of that agreement. Intel has asked AMD to make the relevant portion of the agreement public, but so far AMD has declined to do so.
AMD responded with the following statement:
Intel's action is an attempt to distract the world from the global antitrust scrutiny it faces. Should this matter proceed to litigation, we will prove not only that Intel is wrong, but also that Intel fabricated this claim to interfere with our commercial relationships and thus has violated the cross-license.
Our Asset Smart transaction and the creation of a game-changing company, GLOBALFOUNDRIES, pose a threat to Intel’s business model and illegal dominance in the x86 market, as does our mix of intellectual property and our technology roadmap. And as the spotlight is cast ever more harshly on Intel’s anticompetitive practices by regulators around the globe, Intel is attempting to do whatever it can to limit competition, stifle customer choice and constrain AMD’s market share.
According to AMD's form 8-K filing, Intel isn't kidding about taking away AMD's license—it "purports to terminate [AMD]'s rights and licenses under the Cross License in 60 days if the alleged breach has not been corrected."
Some background: The Patent Cross License Agreement benefits both companies by granting each company license to the others’ patents. This is not a technology license. To put it simply, the pace of innovation is fast and furious in our market, and the agreement’s purpose is to ensure that each company can innovate freely in its product designs, without threat of patent infringement litigation over our respective innovations. To be clear, Intel leverages innovative AMD patents critical for its product designs under the cross license. This includes AMD patents related to 64-bit architecture extensions, integrated memory controller, multi-core architecture, etc. The cross-license is very much a two-way street.
Intel currently uses AMD's x86-64 technology in all shipping Pentium and Core processors, while AMD, naturally, uses Intel's x86 tech in all of its PC processors.
Here's why Intel thinks AMD is breaching the agreement:
Intel believes that Global Foundries is not a subsidiary under terms of the agreement and is therefore not licensed under the 2001 patent cross-license agreement. Intel also said the structure of the deal between AMD and ATIC breaches a confidential portion of that agreement. Intel has asked AMD to make the relevant portion of the agreement public, but so far AMD has declined to do so.
AMD responded with the following statement:
Intel's action is an attempt to distract the world from the global antitrust scrutiny it faces. Should this matter proceed to litigation, we will prove not only that Intel is wrong, but also that Intel fabricated this claim to interfere with our commercial relationships and thus has violated the cross-license.
Our Asset Smart transaction and the creation of a game-changing company, GLOBALFOUNDRIES, pose a threat to Intel’s business model and illegal dominance in the x86 market, as does our mix of intellectual property and our technology roadmap. And as the spotlight is cast ever more harshly on Intel’s anticompetitive practices by regulators around the globe, Intel is attempting to do whatever it can to limit competition, stifle customer choice and constrain AMD’s market share.
According to AMD's form 8-K filing, Intel isn't kidding about taking away AMD's license—it "purports to terminate [AMD]'s rights and licenses under the Cross License in 60 days if the alleged breach has not been corrected."
Some background: The Patent Cross License Agreement benefits both companies by granting each company license to the others’ patents. This is not a technology license. To put it simply, the pace of innovation is fast and furious in our market, and the agreement’s purpose is to ensure that each company can innovate freely in its product designs, without threat of patent infringement litigation over our respective innovations. To be clear, Intel leverages innovative AMD patents critical for its product designs under the cross license. This includes AMD patents related to 64-bit architecture extensions, integrated memory controller, multi-core architecture, etc. The cross-license is very much a two-way street.
Intel currently uses AMD's x86-64 technology in all shipping Pentium and Core processors, while AMD, naturally, uses Intel's x86 tech in all of its PC processors.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
AMD Launches World’s First 40nm Graphics Processors

AMD today announced the world’s first graphics processors to harness 40nm process technology: the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4860 and ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4830. These feature-rich graphics processors redefine mobile PC entertainment with advanced capabilities including support for the latest Microsoft DirectX® 10.1 games, a home theater-quality HD multimedia experience, and energy-efficient features for long battery life at work, at home or at play.
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4860 graphics will be featured in the forthcoming Asus K notebook.
The new 40nm production process allows notebook manufacturers to deliver more graphics horsepower in a smaller ASIC die size, giving people access to highly capable discrete graphics ideal for smaller notebooks. This milestone marks the fifth consecutive first-to-market process transition for ATI graphics processors.
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4860 and ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4830 graphics processors feature powerful 3D engines derived from the award-winning ATI Radeon HD 4800 desktop series architecture with support for DirectX 10.1. Take crisp, detail-rich images and outstanding visual effects wherever you go for unparalleled levels of 3D gaming realism. The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4860 supports GDDR5 memory technology contributing to stunning improvements in game play and performance with nearly twice the memory bandwidth of GDDR3.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
AMD Demonstrates 6-Core Istanbul
Tech Report looked at a demo of the 6-core Istanbul Opteron.
AMD showed several demonstrations of Istanbul silicon in action. The first was a simple showing of Task Manager on the Windows Server 2008 desktop, in which the utility showed activity indicators for each of the 24 cores in a quad-socket system.

The second demo was conducted on a dual-socket system with 12 cores. The main OS was Windows Server 2008, but the system also hosted three separate virtual machines: one each for Windows Server 2003, Red Hat Linux, and SLES 11 x64. Each VM had four cores dedicated to it.
The third demo was the most interesting for a couple of reasons. First, because it was intended to show how Istanbul can serve as a drop-in upgrade for Socket F systems. The only requirements: the system must support split power planes, and it must have a BIOS upgrade to operate with the new processors. Second, the demo was impressive because it included a performance test. Two otherwise-identical systems were situated side by side: one with a quartet of Shanghai Opterons, the other with four Istanbul chips. Both systems were running with HyperTransport 3 active—a capability coming soon to Shanghai Opterons but not yet available in current products. To illustrate the performance difference between the two boxes, the AMD tech ran a Stream benchmark. The 16-core Shanghai system produced throughput numbers in the range of 25,000 MB/s. The 24-core Istanbul box, by contrast, hit about 42,000 MB/s.
Shanghai:

Istanbul:

Scheduled to launch in the second half of this year, “Istanbul” is expected to be the only x86 six-core processor available for two and four-socket systems and higher.
This video indicates the consistency of AMD's architecture and upgrade from the Quad-Core AMD Opteron Processors to Six-Core AMD Opteron Processors (Istanbul):
The second video shows Istanbul running on a 2P virtualization platform, highlighting Istanbul's virtualization capabilities:
Thanks to a reader who informed me about those videos :-)
AMD showed several demonstrations of Istanbul silicon in action. The first was a simple showing of Task Manager on the Windows Server 2008 desktop, in which the utility showed activity indicators for each of the 24 cores in a quad-socket system.

The second demo was conducted on a dual-socket system with 12 cores. The main OS was Windows Server 2008, but the system also hosted three separate virtual machines: one each for Windows Server 2003, Red Hat Linux, and SLES 11 x64. Each VM had four cores dedicated to it.
The third demo was the most interesting for a couple of reasons. First, because it was intended to show how Istanbul can serve as a drop-in upgrade for Socket F systems. The only requirements: the system must support split power planes, and it must have a BIOS upgrade to operate with the new processors. Second, the demo was impressive because it included a performance test. Two otherwise-identical systems were situated side by side: one with a quartet of Shanghai Opterons, the other with four Istanbul chips. Both systems were running with HyperTransport 3 active—a capability coming soon to Shanghai Opterons but not yet available in current products. To illustrate the performance difference between the two boxes, the AMD tech ran a Stream benchmark. The 16-core Shanghai system produced throughput numbers in the range of 25,000 MB/s. The 24-core Istanbul box, by contrast, hit about 42,000 MB/s.
Shanghai:

Istanbul:

Scheduled to launch in the second half of this year, “Istanbul” is expected to be the only x86 six-core processor available for two and four-socket systems and higher.
This video indicates the consistency of AMD's architecture and upgrade from the Quad-Core AMD Opteron Processors to Six-Core AMD Opteron Processors (Istanbul):
The second video shows Istanbul running on a 2P virtualization platform, highlighting Istanbul's virtualization capabilities:
Thanks to a reader who informed me about those videos :-)
Thursday, February 19, 2009
AMD Desktop Roadmap Update Feb 2009
Here we provide the latest AMD Desktop Roadmap:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=F1N312SR
or
http://www.mediafire.com/?ghwrumzyjt5
Additions:
Added Phenom™ II 500 series “Callisto” processors to launch in Q209:
AMD Phenom II X2 550 3.1GHz, 7MB Total Cache
AMD Phenom II X2 545 3.0GHz, 7MB Total Cache
Changes:
Changed AMD Phenom II X4 950 3.1GHz to AMD Phenom II X4 955 3.2GHz.
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=F1N312SR
or
http://www.mediafire.com/?ghwrumzyjt5
Additions:
Added Phenom™ II 500 series “Callisto” processors to launch in Q209:
AMD Phenom II X2 550 3.1GHz, 7MB Total Cache
AMD Phenom II X2 545 3.0GHz, 7MB Total Cache
Changes:
Changed AMD Phenom II X4 950 3.1GHz to AMD Phenom II X4 955 3.2GHz.
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