AMD Kaveri APU Delay Confirmed – Launches Pushed To Mid-February 2014
A few weeks ago, we heard reports that AMD might possibly delay their upcoming Kaveri APU and push its
launch to Q1 2014. The rumor has been confirmed by
VR-Zone who got a look at AMD’s Internal documents detailing the AMD’s HSA APU efforts and roadmaps.
AMD Kaveri APU Delayed – Launches in Mid-February 2014
AMD’s Kaveri APU were originally scheduled for launch in Q4 2013 with the arrival of the new A-Series desktop APUs that would feature an x86
Steamroller
core architecture along with the latest GCN graphics die. A major
feature to be implemented in the Kaveri APU is the HUMA memory
architecture which is part of HSA (Heterogeneous
System Architecture) which would allow PCs to make use of a unified memory architecture which would allow
cross sharing of system ram between the GPU and CPU.
This would enhance the way PCs access and communicate with their memory. This would pit the launch of Kaveri APU close to the AMD Berlin
server APU that’s specifically the same thing aimed towards the enterprise markets while Kaveri APU would ship to consumers.
It is expected that AMD would only provide two A10 and one A8 Kaveri
APU samples to its channel partners in Decemeber 2013 which would make
it quiet difficult for AMD to provide retail channels with Kaveri APUs
until mid-February 2014. This is a major letdown since many AMD fans
were expecting a launch of the next gen APU architecture featuring
steamroller cores by fall 2013 but it looks like we will have to wait
till next year. On the bright side, AMD board partners are shipping some
of their first FM2+ socket based products which includes
ASUS’s A88XM-A and A55BM-A motherboards.
AMD Kaveri APU platform would launch with the AMD A88X “Bolton D4″ and A87X chipsets on the
socket FM2+ motherboards. The
socket FM2+ would be
backwards compatible with
both Richland and Trinity APUs which is a plus point but Kaveri won’t
operate on the FM2 motherboards due to different pin layout. Kaveri
would launch in Dual and Quad core steamroller SKUs with GCN enabled
integrated graphics processors. Desktop models would range between 100
and 65W TDPs while mobility models would have 35W TDP and even lower for
specific APUs.
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