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Author Topic: tldr: Why isn't KNC able to compete with *55nm bitfury's W/GH?  (Read 6654 times)
jspielberg
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September 13, 2013, 01:00:57 PM
 #21

One still doesn't exist though

Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence.
plasmoske
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September 13, 2013, 01:15:58 PM
 #22

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
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September 13, 2013, 01:38:15 PM
 #23

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
SIGH nevermind

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September 13, 2013, 02:29:01 PM
 #24

Right is that not significantly better than their original claims of 250Gh/s and under 1000w? so what perspective do I need exactly? My point still stands they have been pessimistic so as to under promise and over deliver,

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

Yitterbum, I think you're reading me wrong today mate, i'm totally chilled, and i've always enjoyed your comments. I rate Bitfury, he's performed a stella effort considering he is a sole guy, and of course they would need to go for full custom in future. Fact is it's comparing apples to oranges, both went for different solutions with the tech and time available to them, both innovative, both solving a similar problem with an alternative approach, one low cost, full custom, one high cost, but minimal aggrigated risk, both on a finite timeframe, nether products are expected to last forever, but for their window of opportunity, both sufficient solutions, if both succeed. One has, the other we will know very soon.

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September 13, 2013, 02:56:12 PM
 #25

Right is that not significantly better than their original claims of 250Gh/s and under 1000w? so what perspective do I need exactly? My point still stands they have been pessimistic so as to under promise and over deliver, and not push marketing BS such as Butterfly Labs and the ilk who are claiming their simulated best case as feasible so as to lock in pre-order cash to fund their NRE and future lifestyles.

You talk like they've actually delivered something. I'd love KNC to deliver. We need the competition. But until they actually ship something real, their "under promise over deliver" spiel is just marketing BS to lock in pre-order cash to fund their lifestyles just like everyone else.

Buy & Hold
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September 13, 2013, 03:01:12 PM
 #26

You are just too stupid to understand, I figured as much anyways.

+10 And my You are to stupid too !! 8P

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September 13, 2013, 06:03:20 PM
 #27

One might also ask: Why does BFL's 65nm chip consume ~8x as much power per hash as BitFury's 55nm chip?

Both are supposedly Full Custom designs, I believe.

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September 13, 2013, 06:26:26 PM
 #28

One might also ask: Why does BFL's 65nm chip consume ~8x as much power per hash as BitFury's 55nm chip?

Both are supposedly Full Custom designs, I believe.

I may be wrong but I was under the impression that the BFL chip was not full custom.  There are a few steps between ASIC hard copy and full custom like standard cells.  I am guessing the BFL chip is in the middle of the range.

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September 13, 2013, 06:42:25 PM
 #29

One might also ask: Why does BFL's 65nm chip consume ~8x as much power per hash as BitFury's 55nm chip?

Both are supposedly Full Custom designs, I believe.

I may be wrong but I was under the impression that the BFL chip was not full custom.  There are a few steps between ASIC hard copy and full custom like standard cells.  I am guessing the BFL chip is in the middle of the range.

First let me start off by confirming that BFL's process node is indeed a full custom 65nm process. Our technology is completely hand routed, designed by us and for us. This is not some cheap off the shelf, licensed RTL or programmatically placed chip. We have designed our technology from the ground up to be the fastest, most power efficient ASIC chip available now or for the foreseeable future.

"All safe deposit boxes in banks or financial institutions have been sealed... and may only be opened in the presence of an agent of the I.R.S." - President F.D. Roosevelt, 1933
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September 13, 2013, 06:49:16 PM
Last edit: September 13, 2013, 07:13:28 PM by DeathAndTaxes
 #30

One might also ask: Why does BFL's 65nm chip consume ~8x as much power per hash as BitFury's 55nm chip?

Both are supposedly Full Custom designs, I believe.

Full custom has no standard definition.  It is a marketing buzzword these days.  What one companies calls "full custom" another company may not.  A lot depends on the quality of the design and nobody hand places each transistor so custom or not there is some library used, some software is more granular and some is more macro so it is more shades of gray then a black and white distinction.    

That shouldn't take away from Bitfury their design is very efficient. One thing to consider is that Bitfury uses a rolled design and all other designs to date have been unrolled.  Unrolled design has been the conventional wisdom back to the FPGA days, so Bitfury going with a rolled design (which they did on their FPGA as well) may be part of the "magic".  Bitfury likely would have seen commercial success in the FPGA space if BFL hadn't resorted to using underhanded tactics.  BFL announcing ASICs would be available in a few months back in the summer of 2012 killed further demand for FPGAs.  Still Bitfury FPGA design was very efficient compared to competitors so it shouldn't be much surprise that their ASIC implementation would be as well.

Whatever the reason, they use die space very efficiently.  A different way to look at it is how much die space it takes per GH at nominal clockspeed.  Transistor size is directly proportional to process node so I normalized all results to 55nm (native density * (process node/55)^2 ).  KNC & Cointerra not included because they haven't released die size details.  

Code:
                                                     Die Efficiency (GH/cm3)
          Process (nm)  Perf (GH/s)  Die Size (mm2)    Raw    Normalized (55nm)*
ASICMiner    130              0.33           21.70     1.5          8.5
Avalon       110              0.28           16.13     1.7          6.9
BFL           65              4.00           56.25     7.1          9.9
Bitfury       55              3.00           14.44    20.8         20.8
Hashfast      28            400.00          324.00   123.5         32.0

Note: This should't be taken as an endorsement but more an academical look at how much silicon each design requires to accomplish the same thing if they were fabricated at the same process size.  Everything else being equal less die space per unit of hashing power is better.  It means less silicon cost and compensating for clock frequency and voltage less power usage.  

* Smaller process node is going to have smaller features.  By calculating the change in die size if fabricated at 55nm it provides a better comparison of die efficiency.  Now this isn't a perfect comparison because clock speeds will vary based on process node and how "hard" the manufacturer decides to push the chip.  To do better though requires knowing the clock speed of each chip and the corresponding performance which I don't have or even know if it is available.
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September 13, 2013, 07:34:53 PM
 #31


That shouldn't take away from Bitfury their design is very efficient. One thing to consider is that Bitfury uses a rolled design and all other designs to date have been unrolled.  Unrolled design has been the conventional wisdom back to the FPGA days, so Bitfury going with a rolled design (which they did on their FPGA as well) may be part of the "magic".  Bitfury likely would have seen commercial success in the FPGA space if BFL hadn't resorted to using underhanded tactics.  BFL announcing ASICs would be available in a few months back in the summer of 2012 killed further demand for FPGAs.  Still Bitfury FPGA design was very efficient compared to competitors so it shouldn't be much surprise that their ASIC implementation would be as well.

What does rolled design mean?  Is it similar to pipelined in CPU architecture?  Not having one part wait for the other but having the parts work in unison like an assembly line?


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September 13, 2013, 07:36:44 PM
 #32

Right is that not significantly better than their original claims of 250Gh/s and under 1000w? so what perspective do I need exactly? My point still stands they have been pessimistic so as to under promise and over deliver,

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

If it doesn't exist then you can't say it's energy efficiency is bad.

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September 13, 2013, 07:40:53 PM
 #33

My guess is that Bitfury is very skilled in analog chip design and the use of custom transistors, thus enabling him to handcraft a high performance digital chip using only 55nm. On the other hand the KnC/ORSoC people are probably more comfortable with using building blocks (standard cell, FPGA ports, etc.).

Bitfury never designed chip in his life before. This one is his first one. Also he says 5-6 years ago he didn't know who are Ampere and Volt and where do they meet each other. This is what he says.

Actually, I have no idea where Ampere and Volt met.  I'm assuming they must have at some point.   

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September 13, 2013, 09:23:38 PM
 #34

Because a one man bitfury team is that much more talented than KNC.
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September 13, 2013, 09:43:39 PM
 #35

Full custom has no standard definition.  It is a marketing buzzword these days.  What one companies calls "full custom" another company may not.  A lot depends on the quality of the design and nobody hand places each transistor so custom or not there is some library used, some software is more granular and some is more macro so it is more shades of gray then a black and white distinction.    

It seems very unlikely any bitcoin asic provider is doing "full custom" in the sense that they design their own transistors instead of using standard cell libraries, provided either by the fab, or higher level libraries provided by the design house. That to me is the definition of full custom, any other definition is IMO bogus.

Quote
Code:
                                                     Die Efficiency (GH/cm3)
          Process (nm)  Perf (GH/s)  Die Size (mm2)    Raw    Normalized (55nm)*
ASICMiner    130              0.33           21.70     1.5          8.5
Avalon       110              0.28           16.13     1.7          6.9
BFL           65              4.00           56.25     7.1          9.9
Bitfury       55              3.00           14.44    20.8         20.8
Hashfast      28            400.00          324.00   123.5         32.0

Wow, nice numbers, thanks for sharing. That hashfast chip is HUGE. Granted, a bitcoin asic is pretty much a "copy paste" job of a single hashing engine, and I assume they implemented redundancy to cope with single and multiple hash engine defects, but still, such a large chip on such a relatively new process, thats some risk they are taking. I wonder what made them decide on that. For most things, you try to stay under ~100-150mm2 unless you have a very good reason.
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September 13, 2013, 11:10:58 PM
 #36

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
SIGH nevermind

well... he sort of does have a point.  You started the discussion comparing their supposed claimed values.  Only to point out one doesn't exist when someone gives the knc chip's advantage.  If we're gonna "stay on topic" all we can do really is hypothetically compare the two which is assumed when you started the thread... just saying.
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September 14, 2013, 08:50:50 AM
 #37

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
SIGH nevermind

well... he sort of does have a point.  You started the discussion comparing their supposed claimed values.  Only to point out one doesn't exist when someone gives the knc chip's advantage.  If we're gonna "stay on topic" all we can do really is hypothetically compare the two which is assumed when you started the thread... just saying.

Exactly. Kind of makes you wonder what are the motivations for the OP starting a thread such as this. I'd be interested to hear the answer to plasmoske's question. (or at least a better answer than "nevermind")

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September 14, 2013, 09:10:05 AM
 #38

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
SIGH nevermind

well... he sort of does have a point.  You started the discussion comparing their supposed claimed values.  Only to point out one doesn't exist when someone gives the knc chip's advantage.  If we're gonna "stay on topic" all we can do really is hypothetically compare the two which is assumed when you started the thread... just saying.

Exactly. Kind of makes you wonder what are the motivations for the OP starting a thread such as this. I'd be interested to hear the answer to plasmoske's question. (or at least a better answer than "nevermind")
Out of curiosity? It doesn't make sense that 55nm would TROUNCE something that should be 4x more power efficient. I said nevermind because his question is retarded, everyone is talking about KNC vs bitfury, look at the fucking 50000 page thread of KNC people talking about something that also doesn't exist. You can't have it both ways, either it exists and we're discussing it (hence nevermind), or it doesn't exist and its equally shit.

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September 14, 2013, 11:59:11 AM
 #39

Good reply but your action doesn't really reflect what you type. You start a thread about knc chip vs bitfury's and ask why knc is less efficient etc.

People explain to you why that is so and then you just dismiss it off because "knc chips don't exist though". What else are people going to discuss about if you just dismiss it off like that???

You should've just named the thread "tldr: KNC isn't able to compete with *55nm bitfury's w/GH because they don't exist!"

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September 14, 2013, 12:15:06 PM
 #40

The perspective is you need to chill, seems like you're taking it personally that someone thinks bitfury's design is better, which is pretty much irrelevant. KnC's are cheaper, come with a case and are pre-configured and plug and play. Obviously a better deal.

But they'll likely need to go for a full custom core to compete with other 28nm chips in the future.

One still doesn't exist though

So if that's what you're saying, why even make a thread about a non-existent chip then???
SIGH nevermind

well... he sort of does have a point.  You started the discussion comparing their supposed claimed values.  Only to point out one doesn't exist when someone gives the knc chip's advantage.  If we're gonna "stay on topic" all we can do really is hypothetically compare the two which is assumed when you started the thread... just saying.

Exactly. Kind of makes you wonder what are the motivations for the OP starting a thread such as this. I'd be interested to hear the answer to plasmoske's question. (or at least a better answer than "nevermind")
Out of curiosity? It doesn't make sense that 55nm would TROUNCE something that should be 4x more power efficient. I said nevermind because his question is retarded, everyone is talking about KNC vs bitfury, look at the fucking 50000 page thread of KNC people talking about something that also doesn't exist. You can't have it both ways, either it exists and we're discussing it (hence nevermind), or it doesn't exist and its equally shit.

I agree, I got confused and I went to check up their official thread thinking that they really have a working chip!! and in that same official thread people talking about these prototypes as they are in production and just waiting for shipping, I say KNC and all other companies that didn't prove any thing close to a working prototypes are bullish and are in my waiting list ......
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