AMD Trinity Processor laptops are now out!
#1
Posted 16 June 2012 - 07:13 AM
That thing will have good battery life I would say.
http://shopping.hp.c...ent-Notebook-PC
See more here;
http://shopping.hp.c...3D0&PageSize=15
It is also reported they are coming to BestBuy.
#2
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:12 AM
#3
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:24 AM
Arisaema, on 16 June 2012 - 08:12 AM, said:
It's an integrated GPU. Apparently you don't know much about it. GPU performance is just below a Nvidia Geforce GTX 640m, CPU performance is on par with many mobile i5s. (this is talking about the A10 of course).
If you have 8GB of ram, dedicate 1GB to the GPU, then you will have a decent gaming machine, but one with exceptional battery life, even at load, given that it is only a single processor, running at 35 watts. Furthermore prices should being going down soon, once other OEMs other than HP start manufacturing Trinity-based laptops.
So it really depends, if you need battery life than this is most likely a much better option than a dedicated GPU.
Plus it runs cooler than a system with a discrete GPU.
#4
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:32 AM
#5
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:35 AM
Braedin, on 16 June 2012 - 08:32 AM, said:
Lol. It's an AMD processor with higher performance / watt versus Intel mobile processors, far better integrated graphics, and CPU performance of an i5?
What's to hate with the AMD processor?
And HP is just the first to start shipping laptops with them in it.
#6
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:38 AM
#7
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:40 AM
Braedin, on 16 June 2012 - 08:38 AM, said:
Then you've had bad luck. AMD processors are just as (some would say moreso) reliable than Intel processors overall, and HP is just... HP. They have their ups and downs, like all OEMs.
#8
Posted 16 June 2012 - 08:59 AM
#9
Posted 16 June 2012 - 09:31 AM
and if i remember correctly there are dual core i5s. And SB i5s in general are comparable.
#10
Posted 16 June 2012 - 02:23 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 09:31 AM, said:
and if i remember correctly there are dual core i5s. And SB i5s in general are comparable.
Sorry bud, I love AMD as much as the next guy, but nowhere does it show anything supporting your claims about the compute/floating point performance of the Piledriver microarch beating or even being competitive with i5, especially i5 SB. Piledriver has been shown to have about 10% IPC performance increase over Llano (Bulldozer arch), which equates to about Phenom II/Core 2 CPU performance.
#11
Posted 16 June 2012 - 03:47 PM
Trinity is extremely strong for APU - cpu with intergraded graphics onboard........it destroys Intel's graphics completely while with same battery life as Sandybridge and better than Ivybridge as Ivy is weaker than Sandy in battery life....
We don't have full benches yet as the laptops are just finally coming out; but in Trinity's price range.....Intel doesn't truely have match......soon as full benches come I'll post them.......
Intel's cpu is still a bit stronger in lightly threaded apps; but heavy - they are about equal........graphics there is no contest......
Edited by Meldarth Sunphot, 16 June 2012 - 03:48 PM.
#12
Posted 16 June 2012 - 05:25 PM
AMD’s next-generation A-Series processors, code-named Trinity, are the chip manufacturer’s answer to Intel’s new Ivy Bridge processors now appearing in the new Ultrabook laptops.
Ultrabooks? Who games on an Ultrabook?
Personally i find the concept pretty silly - There's not enough iGPU power to play proper games decently, and there's no discrete graphics models. And if you're just surfing or watching <1080p videos, an Ivy iGPU is more than enough to get you by.
I know you're a fan of AMD Vulp, but I'm not going to lie, this post seems like viral marketing to me.
Edit: And if your argument is battery life, then the news is almost as scathing as PCworld's opinion of Trinity's CPU performance - since Ivy still has that beat too.
Edited by iron wolf, 16 June 2012 - 05:33 PM.
#13
Posted 16 June 2012 - 06:06 PM
Meldarth Sunphot, on 16 June 2012 - 03:47 PM, said:
Trinity is extremely strong for APU - cpu with intergraded graphics onboard........it destroys Intel's graphics completely while with same battery life as Sandybridge and better than Ivybridge as Ivy is weaker than Sandy in battery life....
We don't have full benches yet as the laptops are just finally coming out; but in Trinity's price range.....Intel doesn't truely have match......soon as full benches come I'll post them.......
Intel's cpu is still a bit stronger in lightly threaded apps; but heavy - they are about equal........graphics there is no contest......
I didn't give any actual numbers and yeah, Trinity is around Phenom II/Core 2 ballpark IPC... Nehalem, SB, and obviously IB are leaps ahead of that. And it doesn't really trash Ivy as bad as you'd expect, and I believe in a few games the HD 4000 actually beats Trinity somehow (Skyrim & Batman I think). Trinity was heralded as pretty "meh" from pretty much everyone that reviewed it. It needs a stronger GPU for sure. With A10s @ $800 they don't really represent that great of a value yet. And the neutered, non-A10 APUs aren't even worth looking at. Don't get me wrong, I was anxiously awaiting Trinity for 8 months, but seriously put down the kool aid and face the facts, AMD is in the ******* right now.
#14
Posted 16 June 2012 - 06:39 PM
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 05:25 PM, said:
AMD’s next-generation A-Series processors, code-named Trinity, are the chip manufacturer’s answer to Intel’s new Ivy Bridge processors now appearing in the new Ultrabook laptops.
Ultrabooks? Who games on an Ultrabook?
Personally i find the concept pretty silly - There's not enough iGPU power to play proper games decently, and there's no discrete graphics models. And if you're just surfing or watching <1080p videos, an Ivy iGPU is more than enough to get you by.
I know you're a fan of AMD Vulp, but I'm not going to lie, this post seems like viral marketing to me.
Edit: And if your argument is battery life, then the news is almost as scathing as PCworld's opinion of Trinity's CPU performance - since Ivy still has that beat too.
Well, trinity is more supposed to be a budget ultrabook option than a gaming ultrabook option by my understanding, in the ULV department.
And I'm not an AMD fan, I just can't stand criminal organizations. And if blackmail, monopolization, and killing off hundreds of animals and poisoning civilian water sources aren't criminal acts, then I don't know what are. All of which Intel has been found guilty of in the past. AMD hasn't. Clear line of morality to me. AMD does what I need it to do just as well as Intel most of the time. So I refuse to buy Intel and I have an avid hate for them due to their crimes.
Main thing is we don't have a competitive 3rd party here.
Gigadouche, on 16 June 2012 - 06:06 PM, said:
I didn't give any actual numbers and yeah, Trinity is around Phenom II/Core 2 ballpark IPC... Nehalem, SB, and obviously IB are leaps ahead of that. And it doesn't really trash Ivy as bad as you'd expect, and I believe in a few games the HD 4000 actually beats Trinity somehow (Skyrim & Batman I think). Trinity was heralded as pretty "meh" from pretty much everyone that reviewed it. It needs a stronger GPU for sure. With A10s @ $800 they don't really represent that great of a value yet. And the neutered, non-A10 APUs aren't even worth looking at. Don't get me wrong, I was anxiously awaiting Trinity for 8 months, but seriously put down the kool aid and face the facts, AMD is in the ******* right now.
Yeah, before a single dedicated driver update was out for Trinity, and only in one review did I see Ivy ever make a win vs Trinity in gaming.
Not sure which one it was TBH.
And no, they're not a great value yet, but then again, only one OEM has released them yet, so it might not all be bad. HP just released them on their highest mainstream (retail) line laptop with the DV7... may be one of the main reasons why.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 16 June 2012 - 06:41 PM.
#15
Posted 16 June 2012 - 10:47 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 06:39 PM, said:
Yeah. ie: Nothing suitable for playing MWO on, and not to mention an oxymoron since ultrabooks are usually ridiculously overpriced compared to standard form factor laptops (in terms of price / perf, at least).
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 06:39 PM, said:
Listen, a) When have they been found guilty? Any company found guilty of these things would have been sued into bankrupcy a long time ago. Go ahead and give me a link where anyone of importance in the company actually willfully did anything wrong, and was caught doing it.
c) You say you're not an AMD fan, but unless Nvidia has managed to club enough seals to put them on par with Intel, you strongly recommend AMD cards across the (budget) board.
I mean, i take it you're an American patriot and AMD is an attractive alternative to you and thats great, but I don't think its appropriate to basically advertise a company's product in a forum for a game that certainly would not suit that product. You would well know from the sheer amount of threads you've posted in that there are many forum visitors here that would be easily led/misled into buying products praised here. (PS: And i'm not just specifying trinity here, but Ultrabooks and indeed HP laptops in general equally so).
#16
Posted 16 June 2012 - 10:54 PM
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 10:47 PM, said:
Yeah. ie: Nothing suitable for playing MWO on, and not to mention an oxymoron since ultrabooks are usually ridiculously overpriced compared to standard form factor laptops (in terms of price / perf, at least).
Listen, a) When have they been found guilty? Any company found guilty of these things would have been sued into bankrupcy a long time ago. Go ahead and give me a link where anyone of importance in the company actually willfully did anything wrong, and was caught doing it.
c) You say you're not an AMD fan, but unless Nvidia has managed to club enough seals to put them on par with Intel, you strongly recommend AMD cards across the (budget) board.
I mean, i take it you're an American patriot and AMD is an attractive alternative to you and thats great, but I don't think its appropriate to basically advertise a company's product in a forum for a game that certainly would not suit that product. You would well know from the sheer amount of threads you've posted in that there are many forum visitors here that would be easily led/misled into buying products praised here. (PS: And i'm not just specifying trinity here, but Ultrabooks and indeed HP laptops in general equally so).
Part 1: Yeah. No duh. But it's hardware news so eh.
Also, the GPU on Trinity is more or less in line with the minimum GPU requirements for MWO. With an Okay quad core CPU backing it up. And the HP laptops aren't bad. Their warranties are *****-proof / abuse-proof. (See where I dropped mine and was covered, or my overclocking my CPU and it was replaced under warranty despite my killing my PC.)
The only reason on Nvidia versus AMD is that the charts show them rather plainly beating Nvidia in price / performance at nearly every price point. I don't have any problem with Nvidia, save they don't price their cards more competively against AMD.
Second for crimes and such....
From wikipedia, and later from some other sources.
To reduce space used.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 16 June 2012 - 10:55 PM.
#17
Posted 16 June 2012 - 10:56 PM
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 10:47 PM, said:
What do you mean by that? Intel (and almost every other major semiconductor company that is still relevant, except ARM) is an American company as well, unless you're referring to the nVidia vs AMD - in which case AMD also got a Canadian background.
#18
Posted 16 June 2012 - 10:58 PM
Gigadouche, on 16 June 2012 - 10:56 PM, said:
What do you mean by that? Intel (and almost every other major semiconductor company that is still relevant, except ARM) is an American company as well, unless you're referring to the nVidia vs AMD - in which case AMD also got a Canadian background.
I have a habit of recommending non-Chinese parts, I push for more ethical parts, and if you read some of my older threads on the forums you would get that I have something of a anti-corruption obsession.
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 05:25 PM, said:
Edit: And if your argument is battery life, then the news is almost as scathing as PCworld's opinion of Trinity's CPU performance - since Ivy still has that beat too.
I mean battery life versus a comparable Intel powered laptop with a discrete graphics card able to compete with Trinity, or any Ivy Bridge processor with Intel 4000 Graphics.... where Anandtech is showing Trinity the winner;

I see 30% longer battery life on the A10.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 16 June 2012 - 11:23 PM.
#19
Posted 16 June 2012 - 11:26 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 10:54 PM, said:
Also, the GPU on Trinity is more or less in line with the minimum GPU requirements for MWO. With an Okay quad core CPU backing it up. And the HP laptops aren't bad. Their warranties are *****-proof / abuse-proof. (See where I dropped mine and was covered, or my overclocking my CPU and it was replaced under warranty despite my killing my PC.)
I would seriously doubt that a laptop APU would be able to handle sustained very high loads for the length of the average game session, especially considering you've got the CPU / GPU right on the same die instead of split apart, and especially considering the poor thermal characteristics of a super thin laptop, and doubly especially considering HP's reputation for overheating. Besides - If i'm not mistaken, i've seen you steer people away at least once away from buying a laptop for gaming purposes.
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 10:54 PM, said:
Actually, the charts only show that for the ultra low end cards that would struggle to run any modern game at all anyway (ie: the HTPC market). For anything above that, it is as it usually is - competitive. Myself and a few other people linked a few reviews / guides etc that show this.
Vulpesveritas, on 16 June 2012 - 10:54 PM, said:
What i see is 75% AMD using litigation as a way of evening the competition against intel (in the same way Apple was/is trying to do to Samsung) and admitedly, 25% actual, genuine 'found guilty of illegal behavior'. As for the Environmental damage part - Believe it or not, I'm currently studying to be an Applied Chemist (My 3rd year now). 700 odd kg of CCl4, the only thing worth mentioning in 9+ years of huge scale manufactoring is absolutely nothing compared to what the average petrochemical company puts out (I would know, i just finished an entire subject on Industrial Chemical Safety & Legislation). And here i was thinking they were dumping heavy metals into the ground water or something.
Regardless, i didn't want to start an argument / flamewar / etc - Only to try and convince you to be more conservative in what product recommendations (even unintentionally) you may decide to post across the forums.
#20
Posted 16 June 2012 - 11:33 PM
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 11:26 PM, said:
Some people need the mobility, but where one can, you should get a desktop for gaming, end of story.
But for someone such as a college student who doesn't get to spend much time at home, or a traveler of some sort, you may want a laptop. And especially in the student prospect you may want the gaming bit.
And eh, given it is Eyefinity capable, not really that bad. They demo'd Dirt 3 running at 4800X1050p at medium settings averaging above 30 frames per second if I remember correctly with an A10-4600m.
iron wolf, on 16 June 2012 - 11:26 PM, said:
Actually, the charts only show that for the ultra low end cards that would struggle to run any modern game at all anyway (ie: the HTPC market). For anything above that, it is as it usually is - competitive. Myself and a few other people linked a few reviews / guides etc that show this.
What i see is 75% AMD using litigation as a way of evening the competition against intel (in the same way Apple was/is trying to do to Samsung) and admitedly, 25% actual, genuine 'found guilty of illegal behavior'. As for the Environmental damage part - Believe it or not, I'm currently studying to be an Applied Chemist (My 3rd year now). 700 odd kg of CCl4, the only thing worth mentioning in 9+ years of huge scale manufactoring is absolutely nothing compared to what the average petrochemical company puts out (I would know, i just finished an entire subject on Industrial Chemical Safety & Legislation). And here i was thinking they were dumping heavy metals into the ground water or something.
Regardless, i didn't want to start an argument / flamewar / etc - Only to try and convince you to be more conservative in what product recommendations (even unintentionally) you may decide to post across the forums.
Eh. Given that several governments independently found Intel to be guilty of monopolization tactics and such... But as far as dumping, while it may not be nearly as bad as the oil companies... I don't support them either when I have the choice. I walk / bicycle everywhere... And I really wish Thorium would take off as a power source. So eh.
I do hate big business in general however. Sadly for commercial products you don't have much choice.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 16 June 2012 - 11:34 PM.
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