"Oh, I can't wait for new high-end AMD graphics cards," I whispered to myself in the dark just before dropping off late last night. "A 7nm die shrink might just give the AMD Vega tech a little more performance headroom against the competition." Vain hope, I know, and it seems that sentiment is shared by AMD as it looks like 7nm Vega is going to sit tight in the professional / AI space and never hit our desktops.
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A story by first announced at their pre-CES event in Las Vegas in January, where Lisa Su confirmed that Vega would represent their first 7nm silicon and would be coming this year.
"Our first 7nm product is actually Vega-based," says Dr. Su, "and it will be a machine learning product. So Radeon Instinct Vega 7nm for 2018."
Because of that we knew it would appear first as a pro-level chip, but naturally assumed that it would trickle down to the gaming space, as happened with the 14nm version of the Vega GPU architecture. Fudo, however, states that it's definitely not being planned for as a traditional gaming GPU.
His reasoning is sound on this – price. Given the Vega / HBM connection that would make any new 7nm version a very expensive card, as were both the Nvidia Turing GPU released in the September/October timeframe – is pretty low. The only way AMD would then be able to compete on price, and that doesn't seem likely.
Looks like we're going to have to wait for the Zen learning is being applied to that, and with some success.