This the first time I ever seen this! Anyone have more info.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=24586
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=24586
Originally posted by: Intelia
Duvie I would speculate this is the same fast cache as the Dothan maybe .
Originally posted by: Intelia
Duvie I would speculate this is the same fast cache as the Dothan maybe .
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Regardless, if its still netburst, we are talking maybe a couple % over the EE in everything but superpi 1M and 2M.
Originally posted by: Intelia
Blah Blah Blah
Originally posted by: Duvie
Exactly cache is expensive and just adds more thermals...In the 6xx series it didn't but there were other core and process enhancements there....
Intel i smplaying marketing games IMO with starting a cache race....
I would for one like to see quad cores or better implemented 2 cores....
Originally posted by: Intelia
I think maybe just a guess Intel is going to through everything they can at AMD now that they filled this law suite. I never heard of this 2x4 MB cache till yesterday . If before the lawsuite goes to court Intel can show that AMD really can't compete with them it well have an effect on amds case . Intel will probably pull out all the stops.
Originally posted by: Fox5
With all this cache Intel is adding, I'm wondering when AMD will start to add some to compete.
Originally posted by: DrMrLordX
Originally posted by: Fox5
With all this cache Intel is adding, I'm wondering when AMD will start to add some to compete.
They don't need to add cache to compete. AMD can, and probably will, beat Yonah with their existing desktop lines at stock speeds when Yonah is released. Remember that Yonah is a mobile part, and it will likely clock at 1.6-2.3 ghz at stock. It probably won't clock much faster at stock than current Dothan parts.
Intel is adding more cache because they either can't or won't do anything better to improve their cores. Slapping on extra cache is a bit of a cop-out. It is also questionable how much additional performance will come from all that extra cache.
The Dothan(and Banias) derived high cache-related performance from having FAST l2 cache. If you compare a normal Dothan-based Pentium M(2MB cache) to a Dothan-based Celeron-M/(1 MB cache), you will frequently see very little performance difference between the two at the same clock speeds. Putting 4 MB of cache per core on Yonah won't do much, or so I'd guess. Only time will tell.
In the end, Yonah will not threaten AMD products much due to its relatively low stock clock speeds and its IPC. It probably won't be able to beat a 4800+ if it laucnhes at 2.3 ghz or lower, even with a massive l2 cache.
Conroe is the part to watch.