The Inquirer: How AMD turned Barcelona into a right royal mess

http://www.theinquirer.net/gb/inquirer/news/2007/12/08/amd-barcelona-right-royal-mess

By Charlie Demerjian: Saturday, 08 December 2007, 1:22 PM


THE SITUATION SURROUNDING Barcelona is quite puzzling. Not what happened, that much is very clear, but how people are reacting, and the ulterior motives they uncover.

Barcelona is turning into a running joke. From hard SKUs last February at 2.9GHz to badly bugged parts a year later. The roadmap situation has slipped from comical to changing days after release, and that shows little sign of improving. The entire community has gone from eagerly awaiting parts to not believing it even after you have one in your hands.

The situation is bad for AMD. Really really bad. Stepping B1, the supposed release part was revved to BA after B2 was in the oven. B2 is the TLB bugged stepping, and the supposed B3 'fix' won't be out until February in any sort of quantity. Given the track record of the last half dozen steps, the world is not holding their breath. We will see in a few months.

Now, the part that bothers me is why the current furore happened. AMD botched this one badly. For the third or fourth time. Anyone with a memory long enough to remember the rather sad gestation of K8 will have eerie flashbacks. Before that, the last major architecture was Palomino, the less said there the better. The more things change...

Basically, it is the same old mess they are always in, as one person from a much bluer company said, it looks like their tocks are better than their ticks. Amen.

This latest TLB fiasco is only one problem with the B2 stepping, it has two big ones. First lets look a little deeper at what B2 is. BA was the 'release' version, 1.9 and 2.0GHz parts released in September. The reason for the odd nomenclature is that a bug, strongly rumoured to be in the north bridge, was discovered and fixed after B2 was done.

On the up side, B2 raised the speeds available from 2.0GHz to 2.6+GHz with one problem, they couldn't be made. The production ramp was, to be charitable, running behind schedule by a tad, with tad being defined as a couple of quarters. Word is that it will be fixed some time in Q1. Again: maybe.

Did we say one problem? Just kidding, there is that TLB errata as well, that would be the second. That one is distinct from the ramp problem. The TLB problem is fixable, but the fix comes at a rather heavy price, a speed bin or more. Not only can they not be made, but they have to be cut down on top of that.

So, what is the problem? This news blew up again last week, the better part of a month after word of it first hit. It was hinted at during the launch of the chips in early November, and people grudgingly wrote off another quarter for AMD at that point. 2.4GHz parts were killed minutes before launch due to ramp problems. Speed was hammered after the problem hit the news again. Between those two, it became headline news again for no real reason that we can tell.

There have been dire rumours of the chips being recalled, scrapped or shipping stopped. None is true, but the stop ship is the closest to the truth. There are only small quantities of Barcelona out there, and those are still shipping. The thing is that they are only going to very specific customers that are aware of the TLB 'oopsie' and can work around it or better yet don't hit the patched code. Word has reached us that main recipient of these parts are HPC customers, specifically Redhat-based ones. This probably explains why the initial public non-BIOS patch is for Redhat.

In the end, nothing new has come out since mid-November, and now the world is about to end? Nope, not with Palomino, not with K8, and not with Barcelona. AMD squandered its best chance to regain any sort of parity, much less lead, until Bulldozer ships. That is another story though, and one to be told in 2010 or so if all goes well.

The headlines are being fueled by people and companies with very specific agendas. The people, most of them rabid board trolls, are doing their best to keep things fired up. Certain companies are sending out baiting mails to second tier gullible journalists (By this we do not mean the tech people who broke it and who restarted it, but mainstream media who don't understand the technical side) to keep the flames going, and it is turning into a mess.

In the end, what do we have? The usual AMD year-long nightmare launch, a second hosed-launch product, and a rehash of old problems. Add in people who want to see it kept alive for self-interested reasons, and top it off with AMD putting about every possible foot wrong, and you have a nightmare. Wonderful, but really, get over it people.

From this point on, what needs to be done? For AMD it is quite simple: shut up and deliver. Make damn sure your roadmaps are 100 per cent accurate. If this means only putting out roadies that look one month out and taking baby steps for that month, great, that is what you have to do.

Credibility is easily chucked away and very hard to regain. There isn't much to chuck away at this point, so the only way to go is up. When Intel was at the bottom of the Prescott disaster, it promised to deliver roadmaps with 90 per cent or more accuracy. It did. It promised to deliver better chips. It did. It promised to deliver on time. It did. AMD has to do exactly that.

Ironically, just as ATI gets its house in order, AMD's falls apart. AMD kept to a rigorous schedule and hit almost all K8 roadmap points dead on for about four years. It has the engineering skills and discipline to do things right. ATI was a mess a year ago, and now it is completely back on track. Both sides can do, so now they need to simply shut up and do. It is all about the execution. µ

This is a new source that many of our pro-AMD people read as if it were The Bible about a year ago, let's see what they have to say about it now.

Also, what ever happened to reverse hyperthreading? LOL
 
Interesting read. I agree that AMD needs to stop saying things and start DOING things. They need much more product out there than they do right now. A sad lineup of K10 at the moment is all they have. They need to expand their market and start producing chips that can deliver on all fronts.

AMD doesn't need the FASTEST products out there, they just need a lot of products out there. While K10 might be "true quad core experience" as I quote a Newegg product headline; it doesn't offer broad marketing. So what if they can make a few sales in the high end, what matters are those mass sales in the low end and mid-range markets.

AMD needs to stop trying to be an enthusiast company and start becoming a company on all fronts. Tri-cores are looking to be its only hope in my eyes right now. If that falls through, than shoot, I think we might as well call Intel the winner.
 
I would praise AMD if it had a successful, in quantity launch of a quad-core processor that at least is faster than a couple of Intel quad-cores. But since AMD can't manage to beat even Intel's lowest of offerings and even the year-old original quad-core, it's just a plain failure. The TLB issue is what turns this from failure to utter disaster.

I wonder if the post-marketing closing market will be a good or bad one. Typically I've seen post market close statements made so that people have time to digest and not to over-react to the (bad) news.

We'll see!
 


lol, both our articles are from this weekend! Thanks for the link Mr. Caamsa. Interesting read.

DOOM AND GLOOM! DOOM AND GLOOM!

Prediction: AMD stock trades near 8.50 this week.

DOOM AND GLOOM! DOOM AND GLOOM!
 
Credibility is easily chucked away and very hard to regain. There isn't much to chuck away at this point, so the only way to go is up.

I guess the Inq is speaking from experience 😀
 


lol, post of the day!

Best,

3Ball
 


If Intel and AMD have very similar price/performance rations then you'd have to say that AMD's products are overpriced as well.

I will agree with you that any top end chip (which AMD no longer has) is over priced. I've never spent more than $250 on a CPU, and I hope I never will.
 
Hey TC. Just to rub you the wrong way. I was given a B3 QX6800. :) I have never come close to pushing it to its max.

I would really like one of the Wolfdale processors since they are going to have such a low idle that keeping it running all the time for a HTPC will be really cost effective.
 



Baiting is for trolls. Check out Anand's latest. A tie is 25% faster. Add the win % to that. There are palces where you get 40% and that is not with a 2.6GHz Barcelona - which is what they said. Add 1-3% more for that.
 



Yeah, they totally suck. Someone should take their fabs away. Clock for clock is close enough. Give it a rest. I told you your head would explode.
 


...which has been proven, that you have no idea what you're talking about.

http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/page-246807_28_160.html#t1769214

There is no 40%, not even across "variety of workload".
 


I'm reading Anandtech's latest on Barcelona and this is what I see at the conclusion...

http://anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3162&p=12



I'm reading the same article you did and I can not see 40% anywhere. Anandtech even states this in the same article.



I don't see how, where, or why you are concluding a 40% increase. It's not there. Maybe my eyes are different than yours? That would be the only rational explanation as far as I can see.

 
This AMD K10 bug problem is nothing to worry about to be honest, because the performance decrease is actually rather small. Even with the bug, clock for clock Phenom is better than Intel.

At least AMD treated their customers with respect and fixed the problem really quickly and efficiently. Intel on the other hand have failed to fix the big problems that Core2 processors have like stability and heat. C2D is well known to freeze Microsoft Vista, so many Vista users do regret not buying AMD.

Quad2Duo's double cheeseburger Pentium 3 knock off design is not cutting the demands of professionals.

 


Definitely. It readily warms up your room faster than Intel's.
 
Why aren't you counting the fact that 2360SE is clocked 25% slower than 5365 and 5472? So you either have to extrapolate out to 3GHz or add 25% on to any win. Like SpecJBB or WinRar or zVisuel.
 


As I said, how is 2.5Ghz 25% slower than 3.0Ghz? Care to show me the calculations for it?

In case you forgot, we're talking about what AMD said, not what YOU said. If you want to add another 100% performance on AMD's processor due to its 1337ness, be my guest. I have no interest in what you think. I only have interests in disproving what AMD said, and done.
 


LOL. That was good....oh, wait, you're serious. LOL!!! Then it's even better.

:lol:

:pfff:
 



So you don't care abut perf just proving that AMD lied? Oh you're not biased at all. BTW, you're right it's only 20% slower. 2500 + (2500*.2) = 3000.

So for AMD to be 40% faster than Intel per clock they need to win by 20% over 5365 or 5472. They do that in a variety of the tests on anands. At least according to your little chart. And remember to add the 2% for 2.6GHz - which is what AMD said.