How AMD Zen Almost Didn't Make It | Stories of Ryzen, ft. Unreleased CPUs

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • Sponsor: Get the Lexar NM800 Pro w/ Heatsink on Amazon - geni.us/2bxWftR
    This didn't make the final cut for our upcoming, in-depth lab tour of AMD's testing & engineering campus in Austin, Texas, but the stories told (and the unreleased products shown) were too interesting to cut entirely -- so we branched out the discussion. This covers some of AMD Zen's history from a side conversation with Amit Mehra and Bill Alverson at AMD, discussing the many challenges of initial bring-up, products that get pitched and some that don't make it to market, and how Zen almost didn't make the original showing in 2016. AMD's Ryzen CPUs launched to the public in 2017, but this content looks at the behind-the-scenes of what led up to that launch.
    GamersNexus pays for all of its own travel for on-location coverage. Learn more in our ethics statements and policies here: gamers.nexus/ethics-statement...
    Help fund our travel coverage and unique behind-the-scenes discussions! The best way to support our work is through our store: store.gamersnexus.net/ -- grab a Modmat for PC building, a toolkit, a coaster pack, and more!
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    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 - How Zen Almost Didn't Make It
    02:20 - The History of Zen
    04:17 - ALL HANDS ON DECK
    07:43 - Betting the Company
    10:57 - The Only One in the World
    11:32 - Raven Prototype Laser Problems
    13:09 - How X3D Came to Be 16-Core X3D
    15:27 - Fusing Explained
    16:38 - Unreleased Threadripper
    17:18 - Bill Shows Unreleased X3D Performance
    19:22 - How an Idea Gets Produced
    21:52 - Conclusion for Now
    ** Please like, comment, and subscribe for more! **
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    Host, Writing, Editing: Steve Burke
    Camera Operation: Mike Gaglione
    Camera, Editing: Vitalii Makhnovets
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  Год назад +341

    Check back soon for the big lab tour video!
    Help fund our travel coverage and unique behind-the-scenes discussions! The best way to support our work is through our store: store.gamersnexus.net/ -- grab a Modmat for PC building, a toolkit, a coaster pack, and more!
    Like our content? Please consider becoming our Patron to support us: www.patreon.com/gamersnexus
    GamersNexus pays for all of its own travel for on-location coverage. Learn more in our ethics statements and policies here: gamers.nexus/ethics-statements/travel-hotels-amp-events

    • @xpyr
      @xpyr Год назад +4

      I'm so glad I found your channel after going to LTX 2019.

    • @Dan-Simms
      @Dan-Simms Год назад +4

      Oh man I can hardly wait for this lab tour to be uploaded, never have I ever wanted to tour a place more.

    • @Themunit1
      @Themunit1 Год назад +2

      awesome, going to stock up on the new coasters for the collection :D
      btw. mini-ITX-mainboard coaster for big ltt-waterbottles when? :D

    • @SkillisForNoobs
      @SkillisForNoobs Год назад +3

      I really love this videos talking with passionate engineers. Seeing the passion they've put into their products is amazing. Keep up the good work!

    • @forgingfire5831
      @forgingfire5831 Год назад +2

      For reference the original demo for the x3d was a 5950x. Also funny to see they had a nvidia card on a bench

  • @owensparks5013
    @owensparks5013 Год назад +2725

    I have a feeling this is going to mean more to potential AMD customers than a decade of plastic PR nonsense.

    • @Mcnooblet
      @Mcnooblet Год назад +163

      I bet majority of customers could care less if a company tickles their sack, compared to creating a quality product that is a great value.

    • @joemarais7683
      @joemarais7683 Год назад +109

      I’m actually not so sure. Most people buying a cpu really don’t give a damn about these borderline BTS pieces and really only look at marketing materials and benchmarks, that is if they’re even considering switching brands with gamers specifically don’t do anyways.

    • @The1commenterguy
      @The1commenterguy Год назад +56

      The enthusiasm they're rubbing off is piercing me 💘

    • @hunn20004
      @hunn20004 Год назад +130

      The Intel engineers are also meganice....but the PR team is just horrendous... They should just let the engineers run both companies and the PR.

    • @dondraper4438
      @dondraper4438 Год назад +76

      Not just customers, this is literally computing history. I may not buy an i7 920 in 2023, but knowing that it was the precursor to a decade long dominant stranglehold on x86 is something special.
      It may not matter to the average person, but those breakthroughs got us to where we are today.

  • @LordLiquidBaconII
    @LordLiquidBaconII Год назад +1077

    It's really cool that AMD allowed their staff to talk about with GN, this really shows how far GN has come!

    • @doubledigital_
      @doubledigital_ Год назад +52

      and amd!

    • @GewelReal
      @GewelReal Год назад

      ​@@doubledigital_ Yeah! All those fat margins!

    • @dgillies5420
      @dgillies5420 Год назад +1

      Seriously, the best video I have ever seen on this channel !!

    • @ChairmanMeow1
      @ChairmanMeow1 2 месяца назад +1

      It says a lot of positive things about AMD as well

  • @WeirdSeagul
    @WeirdSeagul Год назад +1195

    what a fantastic video, very rare to get this type of conversation. stuff like this is usually way way later after the engineers have retired

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Год назад +377

      Agreed! Really glad AMD allows their team to exercise discretion and speak like this.

    • @labor4
      @labor4 Год назад +9

      thought this too. unfiltered

    • @wishusknight3009
      @wishusknight3009 Год назад +46

      I think this may be because LIsa Su is an engineer herself. And perhaps understands how interesting this is.

    • @itsz2458
      @itsz2458 Год назад

      @@GamersNexus ruclips.net/video/m0WnwOnl8kY/видео.html

    • @ssl3546
      @ssl3546 Год назад +14

      @@wishusknight3009 Those two engineers already went to GN's office, they are media-facing. The stuff they showed is cool but either already public knowledge or (talking about Zen A0 bring-up) very old and not especially proprietary.

  • @KenS1267
    @KenS1267 Год назад +403

    Zen has shaken up the computer industry more than anything in at least a decade and perhaps two. The engineers at AMD have every reason to be extremely proud of their design.

    • @metamon2704
      @metamon2704 Год назад +98

      This can not be said enough, if it hadn't been for ZEN we would still be running 4 core cpus.

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 Год назад +74

      @@metamon2704 Not just on the desktop. Look at what Zen has done to the workstation and server world. Prior to Zen the absolute top of the Xeon stack was a Xeon Platinum chip at 28 cores and 56 threads that Intel sold for $13k USD each. Right now you can get a an Epyc 128 core 256 thread CPU for just under $12k USD that performs faster on a per core, per thread and on an IPC basis as well as a per watt basis which really matters in the data center.

    • @YaKillaCJ
      @YaKillaCJ Год назад +8

      6 cores Mainstream, 12 cores Hedt and 24 core Server. Well server may have been lucky and gotten a 32 core Xeon.

    • @gasoau
      @gasoau Год назад +2

      Litteraly put them back into the game

    • @warmtoiletseat5596
      @warmtoiletseat5596 Год назад +13

      @@transistorjump919 Nah, 2 cores Mainstream. 4 to 6 cores Enthusiast.

  • @DrakkarCalethiel
    @DrakkarCalethiel Год назад +613

    Can't wait for the full lab tour! Alone this segment was insanely interesting. So represhing to see huge companies open their doors for media and let the actual engineers talk, not just some crappy marketing guy. IMO, this IS the best marketing a company can do!

  • @Accessless
    @Accessless Год назад +313

    AMD have had highs and lows through out their history but when you consider just how close the company was to the abyss Ryzen is almost a fable worthy tale of triumph.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Год назад +36

      They pretty much told the Grim Reaper "No. We're not ready yet".

    • @pulsed13
      @pulsed13 Год назад +20

      Especially when you remember that the Radeon division isn't exactly doing well either (Polaris was released in 2017, but were getting crushed by NVIDIA's cards from 2016). Their initial attempt to rectify that didn't really work (Vega) too

    • @wingcommanderbob8268
      @wingcommanderbob8268 Год назад +17

      @@pulsed13 It did though. Vega's desktop gaming iteration wasn't great but it was way more successful in datacentre (where the margins are absurdly high, comparatively) and evolved into the more modern CDNA family which competes pretty well against Nvidia

    • @Not_interestEd-
      @Not_interestEd- Год назад +17

      AMD bet everything on Zen and Radeon, and if it failed, Intel would've had free reign over the CPU market and probably never bother to make faster chips.
      This isn't a tale of triumph, this is a tale of slaying a God and multiple dragons overnight.

    • @lexwaldez
      @lexwaldez Год назад +1

      @@andersjjensen Not today.

  • @AshtonCoolman
    @AshtonCoolman Год назад +278

    This is the best PR AMD could have ever done. I love learning about their history and process in creating these parts. God bless these fellas for trying out X3D on AM4 for gaming. They changed the PC gaming world!

    • @aurunemaru
      @aurunemaru Год назад +29

      I can only imagine the look on their faces then the performance results came in, 5800X3D is a monster

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Год назад +12

      @@aurunemaru "Uh, guys.... GUYS?!?... GUYYYYYS! WE'RE GOING TO WIN SO HARD NOW!!!!". I would have loved to be a fly on the wall at the after-work beer session that day!

    • @Sabrinahuskydog
      @Sabrinahuskydog Год назад +2

      @@aurunemaru Ehh not really "A monster" I would say. Some games it's quite a lot faster than the normal 5800X, but in a lot of games it's not faster at all. In the games where it is faster, yes, it is "a monster". Also: I own an X570 system and I have considered buying a 5800X3D but since AMD won't let us overclock it and my 5800X runs at 5050 Mhz under PBO when gaming then the 5800X3D locked at 4.5 Ghz would actually be a downgrade for me. If they would of allowed us to overclock the 5800X3D then it would of been amazing and the best AM4 processor ever. Now it's just "Ehh.. sometimes it's great, most of the time it ain't great."

    • @tilburg8683
      @tilburg8683 Год назад

      5800X3D does oc with pbo

    • @Sabrinahuskydog
      @Sabrinahuskydog Год назад

      @@tilburg8683 Nope. You are incorrect. We can not enable PBO with any X3D processor. Not the 5800X3D and not with any X3D chip from the 7000 series. Someone renting a room in my house bought a 5800X3D in a X570 motherboard and I spent weeks with them trying to overclock it and nothing worked. No PBO at all. Nothing. They can't be overclocked.

  • @Thx_And_Bye
    @Thx_And_Bye Год назад +489

    The dual CCD X3D CPU really looks interesting. Love to see the lab tours!

    • @justvideos3216
      @justvideos3216 Год назад +21

      Poeple would have bought that. In my opinion it was a mistake to not release it.

    • @sirsia1st
      @sirsia1st Год назад +13

      @@justvideos3216 why are they still stress testing it though? i wouldn't think it's just so that guy has something to do. i'm thinking they're still going to release am4 2xCCDs.

    • @erkinalp
      @erkinalp Год назад +16

      @@sirsia1st 5990X3D?

    • @shadow7037932
      @shadow7037932 Год назад +17

      @@justvideos3216 Eh, AM4 was a dead platform when they released the X3D on the consumer side. Wouldn't have made sense to add another SKU that could compete against the 58003X3D.

    • @paranoid9678
      @paranoid9678 Год назад +2

      @@shadow7037932 they could do it for zen 4 if it works on zen 3 allready

  • @caseyleedom6771
    @caseyleedom6771 Год назад +194

    Thanks for taking a risk to diverge from your normal video format/subject areas. This is a wonderful "History" and "How we got here" video. Kudos to everyone involved.

  • @vroomzoom4206
    @vroomzoom4206 Год назад +859

    I'd rather watch an engineer gush over what they are working on than some multimillion $ ad any day. This was fantastic.

    • @susanlolamitchell
      @susanlolamitchell Год назад +16

      Or flashy CEO keynote on 30 ft screen

    • @MurCurieux
      @MurCurieux Год назад +5

      100%

    • @arthurmoore9488
      @arthurmoore9488 Год назад +25

      Right. What gets me is everyone expects things to be perfect, and PR tries to sell it like that. Meanwhile, real engineers will admit things aren't perfect, but they'll also be the first to say that perfect is impossible.

    • @PegasusTenma1
      @PegasusTenma1 Год назад +7

      @@arthurmoore9488 agreed. anyone who’s done undergrad engineering will tell you that.

  • @jedi9577
    @jedi9577 Год назад +68

    These behind the scenes videos are incredible. Lots of interesting/fun tidbits that most of us never know about.
    Zen A0 running 9MHz memory.
    Binning 1000s of chips to find only *2* that have the incredible ability to simply *work* at room temp.
    3D cache on desktop being a happy accident.
    Laser etching damaging the cache on Raven Ridge.
    Unreleased products.

  • @ThisAintPizzaHut445
    @ThisAintPizzaHut445 Год назад +121

    Wow! I guess I expected AMD's operations to be more buttoned down. These guys were so down to earth and candid-- awesome to see!

    • @ironhead2008
      @ironhead2008 Год назад +33

      They're much smaller than Intel, and it seems they never lost that scrappy attitude.

    • @GewelReal
      @GewelReal Год назад +18

      ​@@ironhead2008 creativity comes from freedom

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Год назад +15

      @@ironhead2008 I'd take nerds over neck-ties or leather jackets any day.

    • @iAmCodeMonkey
      @iAmCodeMonkey Год назад +5

      ​@@andersjjensen LOL, you can be a nerd and wear a leather jacket. Source: me.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Год назад +4

      @@iAmCodeMonkey I know. I ride my MC in full leather gear, but I do not consider myself "a leather jacket". I also wear a neck tie when I can't avoid it.

  • @pyroslev
    @pyroslev Год назад +43

    So, I literally just installed a 5800X3D into my system and I can say thank you to this very happy and giddy guy. The performance I'm getting is well and above what I needed but that I can use it at all is great. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

  • @BraveInstance
    @BraveInstance Год назад +148

    AM4 has been such a good value proposition. I'm just about to upgrade and realised I can put off a full rebuild by getting a 5800x3d.

    • @dodolurker
      @dodolurker Год назад +20

      Yup. I had a R5 3600 for a few years and this winter I thought about upgrading. And since my motherboard only needed a BIOS update to support 5800X3D, I went with that and I'm happy.

    • @2528drevas
      @2528drevas Год назад +26

      I made the same decision. I upgraded to a 5800X3D and a 6900XT and feel pretty good about not jumping straight into AM5.

    • @zf8496
      @zf8496 Год назад +3

      @@dodolurker same decision too! im waiting for my 6700XT to arrive!

    • @dodolurker
      @dodolurker Год назад +4

      @@zf8496 Very nice! I decided on a 6800 (non-XT), found a good deal on a new card.

    • @Alex-zi1nb
      @Alex-zi1nb Год назад +6

      i was considering 5800x3d but going to just invest in am5 since amd proved themselves imo with am4 and this way ill get ddr5 and all the new pcie crap

  • @picblick
    @picblick Год назад +44

    The amount of respect I have for those guys as well as AMD to actually allow this sort of interview is hard to put into words.
    Absolutely awesome!

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +11

      Thanks! More details to come in the upcoming videos. We hope to be able to share more in the future... we have LOTS more :-) take care!

  • @JamieTDC
    @JamieTDC Год назад +132

    Scary to think of AMD not being around, as Intel would of had us on 4 cores 8 threads still and on 14 ++++++++ nm process lol

    • @amvlabs5339
      @amvlabs5339 Год назад +22

      AND charged premium prices for it

    • @ricsip
      @ricsip Год назад +13

      @@amvlabs5339 Dont want to ruin the party, but amd and intel are both equal. Publically traded mega corps, run not by engineers but by bussinessman (or woman). I bet you'd find equally awesome engineers inside intel, who would share equally interesting behind the stage stories about their own products. Also if you didnt realise, as soon as amd got back into the winning position in the desktop and server race, they immediately made their own unpopular decisions (price increase as soon as zen became popular and performant, ceased the hedt lineup in favor of the more costly threadripper pro etc etc etc). Also if you ask many of the small companies, who are amds bussiness partners e.g. in the embedded market, you'd hear the not-so-nice stories about how badly amd neglects many of their partners. Or a more close to PC desktop users topic: when have you ever seen an AGESA changelog, that properly describes changes made to the firmware? Even the motherboard makers have no clue what amd does in these updates.
      So yes, while nice to see such engineer interviews, you shouldnt forget that the whole company itself still stinks exactly the same way as intel does. Neither of them are really "better" than the other.

    • @ChibiTheEdgehog
      @ChibiTheEdgehog Год назад +17

      ​@@ricsiphow to miss the point 101

    • @ricsip
      @ricsip Год назад

      @@ChibiTheEdgehog what is the point?

    •  Год назад +2

      *would have, not of.

  • @tiestofalljays
    @tiestofalljays Год назад +34

    I credit Ryzen’s release with getting me more interested in PCs. It pushed me to learn more about how CPUs actually work, etc. I seem to remember people online saying it “won’t compete with Intel.” Probably was that User Benchmark site trying to astroturf lmao.
    I’ve been running exclusively AMD CPUs in my primary PC since 1st gen Ryzen :). As a result, I’ve only upgraded my motherboard once. Currently running a mini ITX x570 + Ryzen 9 5900X under an NH-D15.
    I have fond memories of my Haswell Intel CPU (I’ve still got it in an HTPC, paired with 16gigs of DDR3 and a GTX 1650 4gig haha) and I’ll probably use it until it dies. Yeah sure, a Ryzen ‘APU’ would be far more efficient, but I have this on-hand, and it’d take awhile for electricity costs to break even if I were to swap it out.
    That Haswell chip was my first ever actual CPU purchase (first time I built a PC). Had just been using laptops before that lol.

    • @SIPEROTH
      @SIPEROTH Год назад +1

      Wow! Similarities. I have an old i5 Haswell built around a cheap Asrock motherboard(still has the basics) I still use with a 1650 4GB as well.
      I started with the integrated graphics because when I built it I had no money for a GPU but I wanted 16GB of ram. Then I bought a 1050Ti when they were released for just 150 euro along with a faster hard drive(SSD's still felt too expensive back then) . My God it felt amazing like my PC got wings.
      Was pretty pleased for a good 4 years. But I started wanting a little more boost so just before the virus mess I found a 1650 cheap at 120 euro and an SSD at a big discount and created a new upgrade around that.
      Threw the SSD, the 1650, another 16Gb of ram and a new cheap cooler that still manages a few decrees lower than the standard Intel one. Got with it like that until this day.
      I now just built my first Ryzen system around a 4500. I found it dirt cheap, new with cooler under 70 euro so I got it along with an 80 euro AM4 motherboard. Got an Arc750 and an RX6600 for it as well. Both very cheap cards around 200 something. For now I have the Arc750 in it because it made more sense since it needs Resizable par. Yes is not the strongest rizen built but everything cost very little and am still going from an old 4 core to a newer 6 core and stronger GPU. The difference is there.
      I am not gonna abandon the old system yet though. I am thinking of giving it one last boost by going to ebay to get the Haswell i7 top chip for it. I checked and they are really cheap now. Just a small fraction of their original price. Then I can put the RX6600 in it or some Nvidia 1660ti or super, without it getting very bottlenecked.

  • @90sMillenial
    @90sMillenial Год назад +85

    Wow. These behind the scenes in pushing Zen into the market is wild! I already appreciated the engineers and talent that go into these chips. But listening to these crazy stories that went into bringing AM4 to production gave be a much deeper respect.

    • @filmboy18
      @filmboy18 Год назад +7

      It's crazy to hear how close it was to failing.

    • @wishusknight3009
      @wishusknight3009 Год назад +7

      @@filmboy18 I don't think it would have failed, but the company was running out of time. Delaying the launch of ZEN by one year could have been too little too late until the money ran out to produce them.

    • @ironhead2008
      @ironhead2008 Год назад +4

      @@wishusknight3009 They got lucky with the GPU division at the time: they were fairly competitive and I've heard that's what kept them afloat for a bit before Zen.

    • @ronnie3626
      @ronnie3626 Год назад +5

      @@ironhead2008 they also produced the APU for the Xbox One and Playstation 4 consoles. AMD Jaguar was not the best in terms of performance but there was nothing more suitable. I am not sure but I think AMD GPUs were competitive back then.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Год назад +3

      @@ronnie3626 To be competitive AMD had to price aggressively. They were making a trickle of peanuts that only slightly delayed the fact that they were eating up all the cache they made from selling their fabs. AMD ran in the reds for 8 years straight. If Zen had been delayed they would have croaked.

  • @Oguz286
    @Oguz286 Год назад +16

    Just yesterday I had a conversation with a professor at our university who worked at AMD on the Phenom chips and his stories about the technical details of the chips are very similar to what Amit and Bill shared in this video. It's also really cool to hear these stories because I can relate as a digital ASIC engineer. It's nice to hear I'm not the only one who has to deal with weird problems and trying to figure out how to make a chip work when there are deadlines :D

  • @SvDKILLSWITCH
    @SvDKILLSWITCH Год назад +27

    It feels oddly candid for AMD employees to rather publicly acknowledge the existence of both client Chagall for sTRX4 (Threadripper 5000) and client dual-CCD V-Cache chips for AM4 and go "yeah we had 'issues' bringing them to market". It's not really "new" info in the sense that we already more or less knew they were canned for business reasons, but it's interesting to hear it directly from the horse's mouth.
    Great video, looking forward to seeing the rest!

    • @tbob2224
      @tbob2224 Год назад +8

      Yeah, while I'm super happy to be able to go from a 1600AF to a 5800X3D I can't help but feel like TR users were thrown under the bus.

    • @canaconn2388
      @canaconn2388 Год назад +3

      @@tbob2224 they were

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James Год назад +18

    I love how excited Amit is while telling this story. It's infectious.

  • @MrSchn3ll
    @MrSchn3ll Год назад +23

    No Fluff, just realness and passion. This is what sells to enthusiasts, not marketing nonsense.

  • @Quizack
    @Quizack Год назад +34

    This is such an amazing surprise! This is why I buy AMD. Look at the passion in their eyes. The failing underdog got Intel to stop resting on its laurels and start competing again. What a great video. Thank you Steve and team!

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +14

      Thanks for the kind words! When I was 10, I told my dad I would be an engineer at AMD. It's been an absolutely wild ride and I wouldn't change a thing!

  • @PXAbstraction
    @PXAbstraction Год назад +40

    It's so cool seeing people enthusiastically tell stories of something they're clearly so passionate about. So engaging to watch.

  • @3dprintedodubunga405
    @3dprintedodubunga405 Год назад +90

    I work at the Intel equivalent of this lab. Always wondered how AMD's looked.

    • @offspringfan89
      @offspringfan89 Год назад +35

      Cool, hope Intel allows Steve to do a tour as well.

    • @gabrielvarela5
      @gabrielvarela5 Год назад +8

      do you guys get free CPUs for working there? I´ve always wondered that hahaha

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech Год назад +25

      ​​@@gabrielvarela5 It happens, certainly. In particular artifacts like this first batch processor aren't of much use to the company but an amazing conversation piece. I was given a first gen production model of an ASIC system I codesigned (silly thing had over a hundred pipeline stages... the AS was no joke), and just this week struggled with memory system bringup on a more general device.
      You don't usually get some sort of free snack bar of as many devices as you'd like, but can often get an occasional device by asking nicely.

    • @KoRbA2310
      @KoRbA2310 Год назад

      Ireland or US?

    • @tarfeef_4268
      @tarfeef_4268 Год назад +3

      ​@@gabrielvarela5when I was there, I was working on GPUs so not quite the same, they were too rare and proprietary to let out of the lab.
      But there was an internal store with like half off parts. Problem was they were never in stock 🙃
      Did get other goodies from the lab before I left though. Just not unreleased silicon, dGPUs were heavily under wraps back then.

  • @Aggrofool
    @Aggrofool Год назад +30

    Just bought my Zen 4 CPU, enjoying it so far, hope this CPU can last me years.

  • @jtd8719
    @jtd8719 Год назад +22

    Totes jelly, Steve. Thanks for allowing us to live vicariously through your 'kid in a candy store' tour. I love that moment when you are told "I had the company's only best working silicon in my backpack on my way to Computex." Big props to AMD for allowing you and their engineering staff to be so candid on the record.

  • @unifairsum21
    @unifairsum21 Год назад +29

    People dont normally think about the things people had to go through to make it work they just buy it
    I always find behind the scences videos fascinating because it shows you just how much work goes into something it's a shame we don't see it more often

  • @Aggnog
    @Aggnog Год назад +50

    Would be really sad to not have gotten ryzen, we'd be at the 10th intel refresh running 1% faster than 5 years ago with 4 cores.

    • @hoilst265
      @hoilst265 Год назад +24

      On the 14+++++++++++++++++++++nm node!

    • @joemarais7683
      @joemarais7683 Год назад +10

      Which would also mean we would probably have even more terrible gpus since there’d be no incentive to implement things like RT or DLSS when there’d be no cpu resources for the overhead.

  • @offspringfan89
    @offspringfan89 Год назад +14

    You can't go wrong when you have a very knowledgeable host like Steve and excitted employees, specially Amit who was really engaged and honest. I wouldn't mind hearing more war stories of AMD from him.
    This was amazing, can't wait for the full video. kudos for AMD for letting Steve do the tour and interview engineers instead of marketing/PR staff.

  • @ford24680
    @ford24680 Год назад +21

    I love seeing the spirit and excitement from employees as they explain how they got something done. I loved seeing HEDT threadripper actually exists, even if it never launched. This was such a cool video.

  • @mufc1417
    @mufc1417 Год назад +20

    Big up Amit , he was carrying AMD on his back, literally!!!

  • @AdamKoueider
    @AdamKoueider Год назад +13

    The excitement engineers have for the tech that they've put their heart and soul into can't be recreated by any article. It needs to be seen and recorded in person. Thanks GN.

    • @Geo64x
      @Geo64x Год назад

      It's already recorded inside a ton of PCs

  • @SpaceCakeism
    @SpaceCakeism Год назад +13

    While I was aware that AMD had bet their company on Ryzen, I wasn't aware of most of the story; quite intriguing to hear it directly from the people who worked on it, and experienced it.
    Thanks for the story, looking forward to the next pieces; just put together a new AMD system as well, so pretty hyped for this kinda content.

  • @dreadlock17
    @dreadlock17 Год назад +32

    This is so cool. You can see the passion emanating from these guys

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +3

      Thanks! we really do love this stuff! take care

  • @Noobochok
    @Noobochok Год назад +5

    Honestly, this is one of the best videos on this channel. Just chit-chatting with a manufacturer about their product history and how things came to be, what issues they had along the road, that's the best stuff you could ever hear about PC parts industry and is just somewhat cozy even. Big love to Bill and Amit.

  • @billalverson6168
    @billalverson6168 Год назад +52

    Thanks to everyone for the awesome comments and support! We certainly hope to be able to do more content like this going forward, and the community feedback is definitely very helpful. I'll read every single comment, but won't have time to reply to all unfortunately. We really do appreciate your enthusiasm and feedback! Maybe your comment becomes a future feature :-) Thanks again.. take care all!

    • @silentdude56k
      @silentdude56k Год назад +3

      That's great to hear! I wish I had more to add than my own "thank you" for working with GN on these pieces. I cannot overstate how much I love candid interviews with engineers like this. Being able to connect the dots between what was publicly known at the time and internal struggles, successes, and side projects is just something else. I'm glad you seem to be enjoying this as much as we are.
      My plan was to go AM5 but my old rig decided to bite the dust a few months too early. Being "forced" to build an AM4 rig as a replacement instead wasn't so bad though ;) Loving my 5800X3D!

    • @TheSorrowedMan
      @TheSorrowedMan Год назад +5

      You guys are awesome, thanks for sharing your passion.

    • @reconciliation86
      @reconciliation86 Год назад +2

      You make he hopeful, thanks so much for your efforts over there!

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +2

      @reconciliation86 😀 thx.. take care!

  • @raymondobouvie
    @raymondobouvie Год назад +10

    I knew there are some stories behind any pivoting products that changes the company, the way Zen changed AMD. And people from company are vivid. Please more content like this - cause as trusted source you share the light on aspects that doesn't get into regular media.

  • @stevekristoff4365
    @stevekristoff4365 Год назад +5

    Really love this type of content. Talking to actual engineers/working devs and the challenges or 'war stories'. It's like our lunchroom conversations here at work. :)

  • @WyrdieBeardie
    @WyrdieBeardie Год назад +14

    This has to be one of the most enjoyable pieces (for me) that you've put out in a while.
    The rest of your videos are also amazing, but this one is chill, informal, approachable and details some of the history behind one of the greatest tech comebacks in history.
    Thank you for covering this. 😃

  • @StachelyPigglyBottom
    @StachelyPigglyBottom Год назад +13

    Man I adore content like this. So interesting to hear about the hurdles involved in CPU development. That laser etching issue is hilarious. What a ridiculous thing to try and debug. Can't wait for the next parts in this series!

  • @caseychaos3601
    @caseychaos3601 Год назад +5

    This really is awesome to hear from these guys at AMD, and see the parts and the stories related to them. excellent content and I really hope we can see more videos like this in the future from engineers at other companies, especially those as enthusiastic as Amit was in this video

  • @Jay_the_Caffeinator
    @Jay_the_Caffeinator Год назад +9

    I laughed when I saw the bottle of Bawels near the wooden box on top of the cabinet. Ah, memories of a by gone Era.
    I am really looking forward to the rest of the lab tour.
    Thanks, Steve. 😊

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +2

      :-p I'm an OG from the lan party days.. what can I say!? See you at QuakeCon 2023?? I plan to hand out some AM5 CPUs. You heard it here first :-)

    • @Jay_the_Caffeinator
      @Jay_the_Caffeinator Год назад

      @billalverson6168 Oh, what I wouldn't give to be there for Quakecon. Sadly, I am on the other coast. I was always going underway when the LAN parties were going on then. God, I am old. Lol.

  • @mho...
    @mho... Год назад +33

    Following & using AMD basically since they broke the 1ghz cpu wall back in the days! sure has been a rollercoaster since then 😉

    • @2528drevas
      @2528drevas Год назад +2

      Same here. I was on a Intel 800EB when the 1Ghz T-Bird came out. AMD ever since.

    • @djlim4612
      @djlim4612 Год назад +3

      Originally i was using Cyrixes (5x86, 6x86, MII), then sadly Cyrix went so i switched to my first AMD build, an awesome Athlon T-Bird. Been using AMD ever since :)

    • @ruxandy
      @ruxandy Год назад +2

      My journey was: Pentium MMX 166 MHz, AMD K6-2 500 MHz, AMD Thunderbird 1.33 GHz, AMD Athlon XP "Thoroughbred" 2200+, AMD Athlon 64 3000+, AMD Athlon 64 X2 6000+, Intel Core 2 Duo E7200, Intel Core 2 Quad Q8300, Intel Core I5 7600K, Ryzen 5 3600X, Ryzen 7 5800X3D.
      To this day, the upgrade from the K6-2 to the Thunderbird is the single biggest jump in performance that I've witnessed and probably ever will. Also, the upgrade to the Core i5 7600K came at the worst time possible and still regret it to this very day. 😅

    • @scoresandflames
      @scoresandflames Год назад +1

      @@2528drevas Don't forget the overclocked 600MHz Duron CPUs, many of them were doing 900-1100MHz.

  • @PhoticSneezeOne
    @PhoticSneezeOne Год назад +34

    I love when i get to see faces behind our beloved but anonymous tech products. Please keep them coming Steve!

  • @wishusknight3009
    @wishusknight3009 Год назад +50

    When Zen first came out, I had similar feelings, I thought "this is not bad". And that it was a return to form. It was good enough to consider over intel stuff, even if just to support AMD.

    • @ssl3546
      @ssl3546 Год назад +6

      For compiling C++ it was a godsend. Compiling QT from source took 24 hours even on Zen 1.

    • @TheGuyWhoDidUrM0M
      @TheGuyWhoDidUrM0M Год назад +14

      I jumped right into 1st gen ryzen probably 2 months after release. To this date I'm still using the same x370 taichi board with a 5600X

    • @patlotpotlot6154
      @patlotpotlot6154 Год назад +1

      @@TheGuyWhoDidUrM0Mwhat a good board, 2017 and still running to this day

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Год назад

      @@TheGuyWhoDidUrM0M I went for a TR 1950X because I was into video rendering at the time. Still very potent to this day. I knew long before that buying a high end system once can be a worthy investment because less effort building one and lasts longer.
      Had an Asrock Taichi X399 suffer fatal damage after mere days (I don't assume it was the CPU) and had to replace both in part due to lacking support from Asrock.
      I could have saved money on RAM because aside from RAM overclock rarely ever being worth it, XMP meant more heat generated in the CPU's internal memory controller and thereby impairing the dynamic core overclocking which tries to max out the thermal limit. Plus I didn't want to risk nuking another system through heat load or whatever causes the first one to fail.

    • @stevenwest1494
      @stevenwest1494 Год назад

      It's just a shame AM5 won't mature in the same way, as it's too expensive in mobo, and the memory controller seems to be lacking any upgrade path up. That very expensive X670 is limited to DDR5 6000mhz. You'd think Zen 5 would be a lot more with DDR capabilities, they're well behind Intel.

  • @leeksoup3199
    @leeksoup3199 Год назад +45

    man this is really cool

  • @Strykenine
    @Strykenine Год назад +8

    This is one of the coolest things you've done on the channel, and these guys are basically the kind of people who want and need your coverage. Thanks Steve!

  • @oz5150
    @oz5150 Год назад +11

    AMD goated for allowing these interviews. Very cool stuff 👍

  • @David_Crayford
    @David_Crayford Год назад +6

    That was a great watch. Amit Mehra seems like a real character. I have worked with people like this who just love their job and are exciting to be with.

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +3

      I am very honored to have Amit as part of the OC team! He is a genuinely awesome dude! thx

  • @dangingerich2559
    @dangingerich2559 Год назад +8

    I WANT that dual X3D CCD chip. I don't care if it doesn't help all that much, I just WANT it, like I want a Corvette.

  • @Ben-Rogue
    @Ben-Rogue Год назад +16

    Seeing the real people behind the product, instead of the PR facade, is seriously cool!

  • @SeeMoreLevingthon
    @SeeMoreLevingthon Год назад +18

    I am flabbergasted at how many people have a mixed reaction to this piece.
    It's incredibly engaging, interesting, and i would geniunely be happy to watch a documentary-style piece on the Zen-story alone, not to mwntion all thenother cool stuff at these labs.
    Steve, please get as much i fo as tou can, and share it! I hope im not alone in this but I do think this is an incredible story that deserves to be told.

  • @GuiGuib81
    @GuiGuib81 Год назад +7

    i definitely remember my 1700x, hold it so many years, clocks were bad for gaming, but the core number was awesome for the price and also the temp was very impressive. I never left amd proc since.

  • @xellaz
    @xellaz Год назад +6

    I remember jumping on the zen ship when it first launched. I bought the Ryzen 8 core 16 threads 1800X for $500. It might not be as fast as the current ones now but it still runs great! My current one now is a 5950X on my main desktop pc and a 5900HX on my mini-pc. I'll be skipping the Ryzen 7000 series and probably won't upgrade for a while. My Ryzen 5950X just runs so good still. 💪

  • @jeffsmith6659
    @jeffsmith6659 Год назад +4

    Ryzen has been a fun ride. My retired 1300x sits on the shelf since I couldn't bring myself to part with all my 1st gens. Great video...Way more fun than a keynote CEO AI sing-along.

  • @cursedowlsgaming5355
    @cursedowlsgaming5355 Год назад +7

    Their is so much more to the story. I want to know more. This was extremely interesting to hear how these things came about. Especially with AMD specifically being they were all but dead in the cpu market. Crazy to think that demo was based off of a single working prototype

  • @J-Kimble
    @J-Kimble Год назад +7

    No wonder AMD parts are doing great. The passion going into them is amazing. I'm glad AMD leadership lets these guys do the exploration and actually listens to them when they have an outlandish (but cool) idea.

  • @miket64
    @miket64 Год назад +2

    These conversations showing the processes and challenges behind the scene mean so much to me. Keep up with the great work. Chapeau!

  • @Jzwiz
    @Jzwiz 2 месяца назад

    Just now watching all the lab tours and stuff like this since im newer to your channel. Loving these videos so much

  • @jolness1
    @jolness1 Год назад +5

    Love this type of content!
    Has been so cool to watch the channel grow and that’s a testament to the relentless pursuit of accurate data and unbiased reviews. Even when doing so may hurt the ability to take advertising money from companies who others don’t call out.

  • @C-M-E
    @C-M-E Год назад +10

    It's almost overwhelming how much Austin has developed into the new mecca of tech to the point that you forget how many companies have relocated major offices there until you hear stories like this, or another long-forgotten colleague reaches out to say they're coming to see you soon... Yep, add another checkmark on the board!

    • @PHOBIAx57x
      @PHOBIAx57x Год назад +4

      It kind of always was on the hardware side going back to the 90’s. Motorola, Dell, HP, Samsung and AMD were all here. Recently the big software companies have been moving in too so now it’s really taking off. I hate it, too many people now haha can’t wait to move out. It’s basically becoming California 2.0

    • @C-M-E
      @C-M-E Год назад +2

      @@PHOBIAx57x I remember when Motorola came in, I think Dell was there before we arrived, but you're not wrong on the Kalifornia issues! You see it on the roads especially, like a license plate soup; a melting pot of bad habits. We're in the DFW area now which has become a smorgasbord of HQs and major distributor hubs. I'm sure it was great for 'the economy' but cost of living went up 400% in two years to where you can't even move laterally without taking a hit. Like we bought our house in 2011 when it was cheap, just under a hundred k and pretty much gutted it to modernize things through the years. Now you can't even look at the same size house, same year as ours, for less than 300K. Then you include what property tax has done, and insurance, mortgages, etc... Oy vey!

  • @MyAlteredSoul
    @MyAlteredSoul Год назад +1

    These AMD videos have been my favorite tech content on RUclips this year! Personal, informative, and nerdy enough to be interesting.

  • @w00tDr
    @w00tDr Год назад +1

    Awesome tour, looking forward to seeing more coverage. I was there in 2012 for AMD's Fan Appreciation Day - didn't get to go upstairs to see the labs, but it was a fun day with lots of demos.

  • @forestw785
    @forestw785 Год назад +3

    Love seeing this deep dive! It’s great getting answers to engineering questions that you typically only ever get from assumptions. I hope to see more on these prototypes

  • @versita3827
    @versita3827 Год назад +8

    You can really feel their enthusiasm. I love it

  • @D4RKWingsS
    @D4RKWingsS Год назад

    Its always great to see how the background of how products started, great work at choosing to do a video about such a topic and hope there will be more of this kind for other products.

  • @Xyberlix
    @Xyberlix Год назад +1

    That was the fastest a 20 minute video has been for me in quite some time. These kind of interviews are just so fun and interesting to listen to. Wish it was at least twice as long. :P

  • @GregorMima
    @GregorMima Год назад +16

    Cheers guys, amazing content. Really like AMD, imo they are the real engineering company. Hope they can fix their GPU dept!

  • @Schmidt_Smith
    @Schmidt_Smith Год назад +6

    I AM REALLY EXCITED FOR FULL TOUR. Those stories behind the scenes are amazing!

  • @drmohammedalmasri
    @drmohammedalmasri Год назад +2

    The guy talks with actual excitement, he seems to both love his job and be a fan of GN!

  • @ShoutaFuwano
    @ShoutaFuwano Год назад +2

    This was one of my favorite videos that you guys have released. It's interesting to hear these kinds of stories from the people who lived through it.

  • @cozy_kat
    @cozy_kat Год назад +67

    I hope this has some coverage of AMD K12, such a shame that never made it to market

    • @jackrabbitping
      @jackrabbitping Год назад

      I'd like to think they are working on arm chips now

    • @sihamhamda47
      @sihamhamda47 Год назад +5

      Yeah I was hyped for that news back then, because it was giving the clue that the AMD K12 would be a potential "Apple M1 killer"

    • @dondraper4438
      @dondraper4438 Год назад +8

      @@sihamhamda47 Didn't really know about ARM back then so I was over the top that they went x86 instead.
      Ironically, Zen is WHY I started learning about CPU architectures/designs, and x86/ARM/VIA. Going from CMT to SMT also had me feeling a kid on Christmas Eve

    • @erkinalp
      @erkinalp Год назад

      @@jackrabbitping Ryzen PSP has an ARM core in it.

  • @kimberlylewis5820
    @kimberlylewis5820 Год назад +5

    Amit and Bill seem so down to earth and understand the DIY market. I hope we get some interviews with them.

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +9

      Thanks for your kind words! We are true enthusiasts, and we very often consider the community feedback as we develop new OC features in particular. We definitely hope to share more stories in the future. We have LOTS of stories :-) Take care!

    • @PegasusTenma1
      @PegasusTenma1 Год назад

      @@billalverson6168 great job on everything Bill and thank you for the 5800X3D. This thing is a monstrosity and crushes any game or workload I can possibly throw at it!

  • @JJfan48
    @JJfan48 Год назад +1

    3:00 look how excited they are to mention the tray, love seeing companies so proud of their product like this, as they should be

  • @buckhammer5897
    @buckhammer5897 Год назад +1

    This is such a cool video. Seeing the people behind the scenes and the hype hits so much harder than watching any PR video at a conference.

  • @dennydravis8758
    @dennydravis8758 Год назад +3

    Its weird to say, being how low key this entire video segment was, but this might be one of the most important conversations about AMD ever. Because its the facts from behind the curtain, not benchmarks or marketing, but the people who make those things happen.

  • @SAKTHITech
    @SAKTHITech Год назад +4

    Would love to watch a similar piece on Intel Arc one day. Bringing up a GPU from scratch must not be an easy feat too

  • @Nelthalin
    @Nelthalin Год назад +1

    Very nice to hear all. The story's behind the products and how difficult 8t can be to get chips running with early silicon. Already heard some story's about previous architecture buts it was nice to hear the story of Zen. Amd came a ver long way!

  • @TheMirkosch
    @TheMirkosch Год назад +1

    I love this kind of videos where you talk to "the experts"/ the people actually doing the work. Be it this kind of behind the scenes or "just" a talk with der8auer! You(as in Steve) also have agreat way of doing this kind of videos, really looking forward to the whole video series coming up!

  • @jstriker90
    @jstriker90 Год назад +3

    I love watching people explain stuff that they are truly passionate about.
    These arent the people that dictate price or marketing, instead they design the awesome tech that we all get to enjoy.

  • @brianm.595
    @brianm.595 Год назад +8

    I bought 2 bulldozer parts to help amd get to this point. Before that i had a couple of athlon chips but the bulldozers, that was purely to help amd not go bankrupt. Intel would be charging us 2000 bucks a cpu today if there were no competition. This was a cool video, thanks for doing it.

    • @Dracossaint
      @Dracossaint 11 месяцев назад

      I get where your coming from, but don't do stuff like that for multi million dollar companies. Your time and money is more precious then that

  • @ragincaveman
    @ragincaveman Год назад

    Thanks for the shout out Bill @20:36 :)

  • @Charlemagne89
    @Charlemagne89 Год назад +2

    This is pretty cool. Makes total sense that they're looking at basically everything you can think of and more (5950X3D's definitely exist in the lab, so too did updated Threadripper parts, etc) but whether or not they get produced and sold is another matter entirely. It maybe seems like AMD is willing to hear customer feedback on various product ideas though, so I guess it's worth communicating back to them with things you might want. Chances are, whatever you think you want, someone already has a part mocked up in a lab like this anyway and is examining it. It's pretty cool to see these guys are obviously huge computer geeks and want to do cool shit, and that these are some of the guys that helped AMD get to the advanced stages it occupies today.

  • @69Xerosis
    @69Xerosis Год назад +9

    Great insight! You can almost feel the pride and excitement they have in their work.

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +1

      Thanks a lot! we really do love this stuff :-) take care!

  • @Faitzer
    @Faitzer Год назад +5

    The amount of love they have for what they did and do is amazing, its contagious, it motivates me, it makes me happy, I love people like this, even if you don't understand much of the topic, or don't even like it, seeing people so happy and passionate for what they do is so great, I love these things, just look at Amit, he doesn't stop smiling talking about all of it ♥

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад +6

      Thanks very much! I can assure you that we are true enthusiasts and really do love this stuff. I will never forget the very first time that I met Amit. He was in town, here in Austin, and heard about the crazy stuff we were doing in my lab... He stopped by the lab and I've simply never been able to get rid of him since 🙂 Be motivated and keep pushing! Take care

    • @Faitzer
      @Faitzer Год назад +1

      @@billalverson6168 Wow, thank you so much for your response Bill! you are great, and contribute to things I love in such a meningful way, thank you for all you do and be sure that you motivate me to keep going and learning. I truly hope you have a beatiful day and life, you two rock :)

  • @dominicmaddox95
    @dominicmaddox95 Год назад +2

    Love this kind of content and info. Definitely the most "boots on the ground" channel in the industry I've seen. Extremely interesting and very informative. Plenty love to the team!

  • @AFNacapella
    @AFNacapella Год назад +2

    gotta love the dude for how excited he is to share his work with Steve.

  • @BoxBoxBoxGaming
    @BoxBoxBoxGaming Год назад +3

    Bill and Amit are my new favorite people

  • @SaltyNomad
    @SaltyNomad Год назад +1

    This is my favourite type of content, the video with KingPin is the best video I've seen. This and also the live stream when you opened all the cpu's everyone sent in. Such cool content.

  • @murmur3966
    @murmur3966 Год назад

    Hello Hello From Canada!!! Thanks for doing this episode guys, it was awesome to see and hear the all the special details from Amit & Bill. They are always great to watch and learn the inside stories that they share. I can't wait to see the next part of the tour!

    • @billalverson6168
      @billalverson6168 Год назад

      😀Thanks for the kind words! This great feedback will help make future content possible. Take care!

  • @LiLBitsDK
    @LiLBitsDK Год назад +5

    I for one are very glad Ryzen made it... Having had a 1700, 3600, 5600, very good processors... super interesting video for sure... shame they didn't do the 4 mem channel AM4 thingie :D

  • @Power-Wiesel
    @Power-Wiesel Год назад +6

    Looks really exciting. Thanks for the video guys ❤

  • @OGPatriot03
    @OGPatriot03 Год назад +1

    I love these behind the scenes videos with the guys on the ground doing the work.

  • @maxsmith108
    @maxsmith108 Год назад +1

    Crazy how recent Ryzen came to life...only 2016, feels like just yesterday...and to see where this same line of chips is now is pretty nuts.

  • @Hairybarryy
    @Hairybarryy Год назад +18

    They should still release the 5950X3D with dual CCD X3D. They would sell fast!

    • @scarletspidernz
      @scarletspidernz Год назад +1

      nah it maybe Zen 5 8950X 3DX2 😁

    • @DFX4509B
      @DFX4509B Год назад +1

      I kinda like the idea of taking some of the design that's been going into the monster APUs that AMD's been playing with in the datacenters as part of the Instinct line, and scaling it way down for home gaming use, just replacing the CDNA3 IGP cores with RDNA3

    • @scarletspidernz
      @scarletspidernz Год назад

      @@DFX4509B that's basically what the Zen4 dragon range and Zen5 fire/strix Apus will be, basically coming up to rx6500/rx6600 levels I believe,

  • @SmokedBarbecue
    @SmokedBarbecue Год назад +2

    I really liked this computex because how some companies open to tour like this.
    Kudos to AMD, InWin and PowerColor (also others i am sure missed ) for making this possible.

  • @adomingues00
    @adomingues00 Год назад +1

    Loved the video, it's fascinating to actualy know about the creation process of products we have at home. The AMD guys were realy cool to listen, and makes the whole company look more like human beings instead of corporate PR-machines. I always love to listen to engineers more than Marketing people. Looking forward to the next videos.

  • @cederian
    @cederian Год назад +4

    Every time Jim Keller goes back to AMD they engineer something amazing that leaps generations or stop stagnation (x64 and high core cpus)

    • @dead-claudia
      @dead-claudia Год назад +1

      even in other companies, everything he touches becomes gold. in his short stint in apple, a4 and a5 kickstarted apple's mobile performance dominance. at tesla, the accelerators he helped design supercharged their self-driving performance.
      he's now the ceo of tenstorrent, an ai chip startup, and he's also concurrently working with sam zeloof on a unique fab design in atomic semi, so he's not likely returning to amd anytime soon