You missed the fine details of them touting the voice recognition horn back then. Here is what they said (paraphrased of course):Originally posted by: nowayout99
Companies have been touting the voice recognition horn and all its glory since pre-1GHz. In fact I remember an interview with an Intel rep where he tried to sell voice recognition hard as a new grand possibility on their new $1000 1GHz CPU. At 3GHz, voice rec. still hasn't made much of a dent.
Originally posted by: dullard
You missed the fine details of them touting the voice recognition horn back then. Here is what they said (paraphrased of course):Originally posted by: nowayout99
Companies have been touting the voice recognition horn and all its glory since pre-1GHz. In fact I remember an interview with an Intel rep where he tried to sell voice recognition hard as a new grand possibility on their new $1000 1GHz CPU. At 3GHz, voice rec. still hasn't made much of a dent.
"Our new 1GHz CPU will let you begin to attempt voice recognition. Of course we realize for it to work well you need a CPU the speed of a 3.5 GHz PIII minimum, but don't let that stop you since you can still attempt it now and hope it barely works enough for you."
Notice that 3.5 GHz PIII part? We still don't have processors that speed. Thus we still don't have good voice recognition. In my opinion it will realistically take a 4.0 GHz P4 minimum though. And those are minimum numbers to get a pretty accurate voice recognition. For perfect voice recognition you need a 5 GHz or faster P4.
The performance of a CPU can be simplified down to this equation: performance = f*I. In that equation let 'f' be the frequency of the CPU and let 'I' be the average number of calculations the CPU can perform per clock cycle (sometimes people call this IPC). How can a company increase the performance? Well there are 3 ways:Originally posted by: Ruckas
I love how AMD chips are clocked lower than the intel chips. But get the same benchmarks give or take. I could go read about how this is accomplished. But I'll just asume that AMD trys to make chips cheap, and perform well. While Intel uses the latest technology ALL the time. Without fine tuning the chips they already have. That's my opinion.
Guess I have this super talent of stating the obvious. But I'd like some feedback. Maybe someone could explain how the AMD chips are able to get the same benchmarks at lower clock speeds with the same size wafer. In lamenst terms![]()
As for future pricing we don't really know for sure what will happen. But look at the current official prices of similar performing chips:Now obviously Intel will win in a race to achieve 5ghz. However, I have 50 bucks cash says that the intel 5ghz cpu will cost 3-400 more dollars than the 3-4ghz chips AMD releases around the same time. Both will have the same benchmarks, but it always comes down to cost. How much is this crap worth?
Originally posted by: Ruckas
I love how AMD chips are clocked lower than the intel chips. But get the same benchmarks give or take. I could go read about how this is accomplished. But I'll just asume that AMD trys to make chips cheap, and perform well. While Intel uses the latest technology ALL the time. Without fine tuning the chips they already have. That's my opinion.
Now obviously Intel will win in a race to achieve 5ghz. However, I have 50 bucks cash says that the intel 5ghz cpu will cost 3-400 more dollars than the 3-4ghz chips AMD releases around the same time. Both will have the same benchmarks, but it always comes down to cost. How much is this crap worth?
Guess I have this super talent of stating the obvious. But I'd like some feedback. Maybe someone could explain how the AMD chips are able to get the same benchmarks at lower clock speeds with the same size wafer. In lamenst terms
Ruckas-
Originally posted by: Stunt
first off id like to say that moores law is dead if this is true
10.2ghz sounds sweet
the fsb sounds really bad though
comparison of fsb to core clock in some other processors
p4 3066 with 533 = 17.4% of core clock
p4 2400 with 400 = 16.7% of core clock
p3 1000 with 133 = 13.3% of core clock
p3 800 with 100 = 12.5% of core clock
athlon 800 with 200 = 25% of core clock
athlon 1800+(1533) with 266 = 17.4% of core clock
finally
10200 with 1200 = 11.8% of core clock
sounds crappy to me
but core clock is impressive
Originally posted by: Stunt
it doesnt, they were two distinct points
nm i looked it up and moores law refers to # of transistors doubling every year
but moores law is already at 18months, so its not true anyways...
also i think the fsb should be much higher...
or are we back in the 1000 p3 with 100fsb days...
to be quite honest, the 1200 fsb is not impressive at all looking at past ratios
hell prescott will have an 800 fsb
making it over 20% of core clock
i like to see the fsb progressing with the core clock
oh and buddy if fsb doesnt really matter for you thats just great because there are many ppl that do
like the ppl with 1833mhz xp's with 400fsb
it makes a difference
btw what if it was a 100ghz cpu with 10mhz fsb, whould you be impressed?
im sure you would, look at that clockspeed!
"why does the ratio even matter, he-yuk!"
good point dumb@$$, lol
Originally posted by: Stunt
actually posting from my house, and your right i am at school university also, highschool gets out at 3 or something does it not? lol please tell me your brilliant opinion on why fsb doesnt matter trust me i think i'll understand not trying to argue just poking some fun at you horrible reasoning of course you could not answer since you seem just too damn smart for the rest of us idiots...
I cant say the same for you. My point however is that there are too many factors such as mem arch, speed [ddrII], latency, to even guess that 10.2 ghz would be bottlenecked. why? because its all speculation and assumption. My view is that, not everything is raw speed. Other things can influence performance from SDR -> RDR -> DDR, or Hyperthreading (who would have thought 2 threaded cpu?) ; Moreover, on the AMD side, Hypertransport which virtual doubles the memory speed or something like that AFAIK, and about hammer well, no one knows.Originally posted by: Stunt
no pass english?
Originally posted by: Stunt
i think the cpu will be bottlenecked by such a low fsb, like the p3 did.
sure it will be fast, its 10ghz, but its low percentage wise for this day in age.
oh my grammer...
for typing on a message board!
hey...you are right...
i forgot to f'n proof-read
or do a final draft
well sh!t
yes i am at university 3rd year elec eng
so yes im not the best at grammer (i am an engineer, lol)
but my point can still be seen
i didnt make fun of his grammer, i just chose not to answer a question that i couldnt even understand.
im normally not a pain in the @$$, sorry bad day.
anyways if you think they teach you english just cuz you go to university...
someone forgot to tel me and my 8 classes a term and my 40hours a week...
anyways pointless arguement, i was analysing the "Nehalem" processor.
sorry if im too offensive for your liking
post something useful next time
