- Dec 16, 2003
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Originally posted by: drizek
I am in the market for a laptop.
The latest word on Arrandale from the source of all truth Digitimes. Can't believe I said that.
Originally posted by: drizek
I am in the market for a laptop.
Originally posted by: drizek
I'm starting to see what everyone means now though about the grain of salt.
Originally posted by: digitimes
and is planning to launch 32nm Arrandale CPUs in the first quarter of 2010, according to sources at notebook makers.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
If you don't have that in writing then you can't legitimately say Intel (or AMD for that matter) was actually late, all you can claim is that the notebook makers in Taiwan were wrong and Intel shipped later (or earlier) than they were projecting when talking to digitimes staff.
Yea I agree. So far as we know, the release date for Clarkdale/Arrandale hasn't changed at all. If the product was supposed to release at Q1 2010, but got forwarded to Q4 2009 and got
"delayed" to Q1 2010, is it really delayed or not?
Isn't it about threads, not speed?Originally posted by: ilkhanIm curious where the 2 cores -> 1 core switchover is for turbo mode. Do they only 1 extra multi for dropping to a single core, 2? 3?. We know base speeds and turbo speeds, just not the switchover point.
Originally posted by: 21stHermit
Isn't it about threads, not speed?Originally posted by: ilkhanIm curious where the 2 cores -> 1 core switchover is for turbo mode. Do they only 1 extra multi for dropping to a single core, 2? 3?. We know base speeds and turbo speeds, just not the switchover point.
Seems to me if you are running 3 or more threads it has to be in dual core mode and can't use turbo. If you have 2 or 1 threads it would automatically process in turbo.
Having said that, if Arrandale turbo is like Clarkdale, then it's a joke, only one multiplier step: i.e. if it is a 12X Multiplier then turbo give you 13X. Certainly not worth the added expense for me.
Originally posted by: ilkhan
edit: I was bored and expanded the chart http://img213.imageshack.us/img213/310/capture2fdj.png
Originally posted by: ilkhan
edit: I was bored and expanded the chart http://img213.imageshack.us/img213/310/capture2fdj.png
Agreed.Originally posted by: ilkhan
The info from goto-san shows significant gains from turbo mode for arrandale (and clarkfield).
http://img190.imageshack.us/img190/4264/capturehuv.png
And turbo and HT aren't mutually exclusive. AFAIK turbo relates to physical cores in use, not threads in use.
Originally posted by: ilkhan
Im curious where the 2 cores -> 1 core switchover is for turbo mode. Do they only 1 extra multi for dropping to a single core, 2? 3?. We know base speeds and turbo speeds, just not the switchover point.
Heres a question: if Intel released a 3ghz single core CPU with HT for 65% of the cost of a 2ghz dual core with the same TDP, would you buy it?
Agreed. If you have a dual core CPU (Arrandale or Clarkdale) with HT, then you can have max 2 threads running on one core before you must bring on a second core. Whenever the second core is on then turbo is off, hence my thread logic for turbo. If I'm wrong, please someone explain.
Ouch, you must be really bored. :QOriginally posted by: ilkhan
I literally posted that and then formatted my comp.
LOL. The single core would be at worst equal to the 2GHz dual core if the dual core doesn't have HT. Remember, multi cores have problems with cache coherency and conflicts, along with other things etc which prevent perfect scaling.
Yes, I would take the 3GHz any day.
Nah. Went from RC to RTM of win7 x64.Originally posted by: 21stHermit
Ouch, you must be really bored. :QOriginally posted by: ilkhan
I literally posted that and then formatted my comp.
Originally posted by: drizek
So whats the technical reason why Intel doesn't produce something like this? It should be half the cost since you eliminate half the die, and smaller dies have higher yields so that should start to even out the cost of the cache and the overall package.
Theirs a gem in the chart. The new 45nm IGP has a power range of 8-10W, that's half of the 945 IGP and it's independent of CPU clock. If one attempts to OC Clarkdale then the power in the IGP will scale with that OC. Likely limiting the OC. Time will tell.Originally posted by: ilkhan
Just noticed that Gulftown (the one thats cutoff) should have a NA under GPU power.
fixed, and added process tech. http://img269.imageshack.us/img269/7091/captureikq.png
Originally posted by: 21stHermit
Theirs a gem in the chart. The new 45nm IGP has a power range of 8-10W, that's half of the 945 IGP and it's independent of CPU clock. If one attempts to OC Clarkdale then the power in the IGP will scale with that OC. Likely limiting the OC. Time will tell.
The new 45nm IGP will also be used in Atom Pine Trail. So that 8-10W will still be more than Atom's 4-8W in SC and DC, but a significant improvement over the 945 IGP.
Originally posted by: tokie
Since the GPU on the Arrandale package also includes the memory controller, will this keep the TDP higher even if one used solely a dedicated GPU?
