At CES 2014, AMD showcased several slides regarding the next generation Kaveri APU detailing its architecture, specifications and prices. The Kaveri APU lineup will be available to consumers in 2014 featuring the latest GCN and Steamroller architecture which would be unified with HUMA to deliver faster compute performance to end users.

AMD Kaveri APU Architecture, Specifications And Prices Revealed

The biggest architectural change Kaveri APU features is the use of the latest 28nm Steamroller architecture that is a true multi-threaded architecture focusing on enhancing the IPC (Instruction-Per-Cycle) by upto 20%. In each module, two separate threads are provided with their own parallel instruction decoder, due to enhancements, the Kaveri APU die measures at 245mm2 with 2.41 Billion transistors crammed inside the die. The Kaveri APU is built upon the 28nm SHP. Steamroller is a completely new architecture hence there are improvements across the board which can be seen in the slides at the end of this article.

The most significant enhancement Kaveri would adopt is the HSA (Heterogeneous System Architecture) powered with the new HUMA enhancements which allow coherent memory access within the GPU and CPU. HUMA would make sure that both the CPU and GPU would have uniform access to an entire memory space which would be done through the memory controller. This would allow additional performance out of the APU incase the GPU gets bandwidth starved. This also suggests that faster memory speeds would result in better overall performance from the graphics card. Now with all the architectural talks done, let’s get on with the A10-7850K itself.

On the graphics side, we are getting the latest GCN architecture over the VLIW4 featured on previous AMD APUs. The die has upto 8 GCN compute units which feature AMD AudioTrue technology, AMD Eyefinity tech, UVD, VCE, DMA Engine and the addition of coherent shared unified memory. Being based on the same GPU as Hawaii, the Kaveri APU die has 8 ACE (Asynchronous Compute Engine) which can manage 8 Queues and have access to L2 Cache and GDS .

For the first time, AMD has called the GCN and Steamroller cores as the Compute Unit with 12 compute units (8 GCN and 4 Steamroller cores).

A compute core is an HSA enabled hardware block, that is programmable, capable of running atleast one process on its own context and virtual memory space, independently from other cores.

The Compute cores would be directly connected to a unified coherent memory.

The Kaveri APU can scale down to server platforms, from the high-end desktop PCs all the way to notebooks, servers and embedded applications. The Kaveri APU would come with TDP's as high as 95W, down to 35W on mobility products and 15W in embedded applications.

For the lineup, AMD would launch only two APUs to kickoff 2014 which include the A10-7850K and A10-7700K while the A8-7600 would launch later in Q1 2014.

AMD A10-7850K

On with the specifications, the A10-7850K as expected would remain the flagship Kaveri APU of 2014 boasting 4 Steamroller cores, 4 MB L2 Cache and clock speeds of 3.7 GHz base and 4.0 GHz turbo. On the graphics side, the APU would feature 8 Compute Units resulting in 512 stream processors clocked at 654 MHz base and 720 MHz in boost. The APU is fully unlocked allowing users to overclock the chip past the limits and supports DDR3-2133 MHz and comes in a 95W TDP package. The A10-7850K would cost $173 US officially.

AMD A10-7700K

The A10-7700K is another unlocked chip featuring the Steamroller core architecture with a max boost clock of 3.8 GHz and base clock of 3.5 GHz. It features 4 MB of L2 cache while the GPU side ships with a GCN graphics die featuring 6 shader units equaling to a total of 384 Stream processors clocked at 720 MHz. The A10-7700K features a TDP of 95W so we may see one Kaveri APU part to feature 65W TDP. The A10-7700K would cost $152 US officially.

AMD A8-7600

The A8-7600 would be the last quad core variant in the Kaveri APU lineup featuring 3.1 GHz base and 3.8 GHz turbo frequencies with 4 MB L2 cache, 65W TDP and DDR3-2133 MHz support. The graphics side would include 384 Stream processors (6 Compute Units) and a core speed of 654 MHz base and 720 MHz boost. The APU would cost $119 US at launch. Specifications for the entire lineup can be seen here.

AMD Kaveri APU 2014 Lineup:

Model AMD A10-7850K AMD A10-7700K AMD A10-7800 AMD A8-7600 AMD A6-7400K AMD A4-7300 Cores 4/4 4/4 4/4 4/4 2/2 2/2 Unlocked Design Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Base Clock 3.7 GHz 3.4 GHz 3.5 GHz 3.1 GHz TBA 3.4 GHz Turbo Clock 4.0 GHz 3.8 GHz 3.9 GHz 3.8 GHz TBA 3.8 GHz HSA Support Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes L2 Cache 4 MB 4 MB 4 MB 4 MB 1 MB 1 MB Graphics Core Radeon R7 Radeon R7 Radeon R7 Radeon R7 Radeon R5 Radeon R5 Compute Units 8 6 8 6 4 3 GPU Cores 512 384 512 384 256 192 GPU Clock 720 MHz 720 MHz 720 MHz 720 MHz TBA 514 MHz TDP 95W 95W 65W 65W 65W 65W Price $173 US $152 US $172 US $119 US TBA TBA

AMD Kaveri APU Die Shot:

Following image is courtesy of Semiaccurate Forums!

AMD Kaveri APU Architecture and Slides:

Following images are courtesy of PurePC!