AMD has been relatively silent on the topic of NVIDIA’s variable refresh rate G-Sync technology since its announcement last year. At this year’s CES however, AMD gave me a short demo of its version of the technology.

Using two Toshiba Satellite Click notebooks purchased at retail, without any hardware modifications, AMD demonstrated variable refresh rate technology. According to AMD, there’s been a push to bring variable refresh rate display panels to mobile for a while now in hopes of reducing power consumption (refreshing a display before new content is available wastes power, sort of the same reason we have panel self refresh displays). There’s apparently already a VESA standard for controlling VBLANK intervals. The GPU’s display engine needs to support it, as do the panel and display hardware itself. If all of the components support this spec however, then you can get what appears to be the equivalent of G-Sync without any extra hardware.

In the case of the Toshiba Satellite Click, the panel already supports variable VBLANK. AMD’s display engines have supported variable VBLANK for a couple of generations, and that extends all the way down to APUs. The Satellite Click in question uses AMD’s low cost Kabini APU, which already has the requisite hardware to support variable VBLANK and thus variable display refresh rates (Kaveri as well as AMD's latest GPUs should support it as well). AMD simply needed driver support for controlling VBLANK timing, which is present in the latest Catalyst drivers. AMD hasn’t yet exposed any of the controls to end users, but all of the pieces in this demo are ready and already available.

The next step was to write a little demo app that could show it working. In the video below both systems have V-Sync enabled, but the machine on the right is taking advantage of variable VBLANK intervals. Just like I did in our G-Sync review, I took a 720p60 video of both screens and slowed it down to make it easier to see the stuttering you get with V-Sync On when your content has a variable frame rate. AMD doesn’t want to charge for this technology since it’s already a part of a spec that it has implemented (and shouldn’t require a hardware change to those panels that support the spec), hence the current working name “FreeSync”.

AMD’s demo isn’t quite as nice as NVIDIA’s swinging pendulum, and we obviously weren’t able to test anywhere near as many scenarios, but this one is a good starting point. The system on the left is limited to 30 fps given the heavy workload and v-sync being on, while the system on the right is able to vary its frame rate and synchronize presenting each frame to the display's refresh rate. AMD isn’t ready to productize this nor does it have a public go to market strategy, but my guess is we’ll see more panel vendors encouraged to include support for variable VBLANK and perhaps an eventual AMD driver update that enables control over this function.

In our review I was pretty pleased with G-Sync. I’d be even more pleased if all panels/systems supported it. AMD’s “FreeSync” seems like a step in that direction (and a sensible one too that doesn’t require any additional hardware). If variable VBLANK control is indeed integrated into all modern AMD GPUs, that means the Xbox One and PS4 should also have support for this. Given G-Sync’s sweet spot at between 40 - 60 fps, I feel like “FreeSync” would be a big win for AMD’s APUs.

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  • twizzlebizzle22 - Monday, January 6, 2014 - link

    This is an interesting area which is fairly new, if a monitor supports 24hz and 60hz, apart from software what is stopping it using some form of free sync? Isn't this a case of the specific panel and implementations in certain laptops having refresh rates which match the output of the display device. Hasn't the mobile scene been using this for a while as a power saving method?
  • extide - Monday, January 6, 2014 - link

    Exposing support for variable VBLANK is all you need. Technically, this should be able to be added on to any lcd display, just the firmware in the LCD control board need to support it.
  • B3an - Monday, January 6, 2014 - link

    If its that easy why don't way more displays have it? Seems ridiculous. Because it also has the benefit of power saving.
  • extide - Monday, January 6, 2014 - link

    Probably because up until now nobody has really cared about the feature.
  • B3an - Tuesday, January 7, 2014 - link

    Weird. But another thing i don't get... how comes Nvidia have dedicated hardware inside monitors to achieve the same thing?
  • piroroadkill - Tuesday, January 7, 2014 - link

    NVIDIA lock in. Is that not obvious?
  • Sabresiberian - Tuesday, January 7, 2014 - link

    It isn't the same thing.

    How well it works compared to G-SYNC has yet to be quantified. Looking forward to The Tech Report's analysis of this.
  • bill5 - Wednesday, January 8, 2014 - link

    no offense but you must be an nvidia fanboy. scott wasson is one of the biggest nvidia famboys on the web! It's comical. On a recent podcast he actually admitted NVIDIA PURCHASED his website some retail R9 290's for some hit piece on AMD (the retail performance variability thing). That's right, he happened to "casually mention to contacts at Nvidia" (evidently he is somehow in constant contact with Nvidia I guess lol?) the piece I guess, and since he couldn't afford them, Nvidia offered to pay for the AMD cards for testing!

    I'm sorry, that just destroys any notion of website integrity..

    I mean, I think Scott is really smart, and just because he's biased doesn't mean his work cant have value, he personally pretty much invented the whole frame pacing thing which was a great thing even if now played out, but be advised he is very biased.
  • Klimax - Wednesday, January 8, 2014 - link

    Haha no.
    BTW: "AMD Center"...
  • TristanSDX - Monday, January 6, 2014 - link

    Because companies do not want to give something for free. They always want money, even for slightest improvement

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