Originally posted by: zsdersw
Incorrect. The P4 was not a disaster. Northwood was a resounding success. Prescott was not, neither was Williamette, but Presler was okay and a good way to end the Netburst architecture.
I don't agree. P4 CPUs were very expencive and very performance/price uncompetetive. Although NorthwoodC outperformed the K7, it was very expencive and at same price level there wasn't any Northwood that coult hold its own against K7. In the beginign of 2002 I purchased two systems with all same components, except the mainboard, RAM and CPU:
1. Asus P4T-E, Intel 850i, AGP x6, RDRAM-800
512MB (2x256MB) Samsung Rambus 800MHz
Intel P4(Northwood) 1.8GHz 512kB L2 FSB-400
2. MSI K7T266Pro-2, VIA KT266A, AGP x8, DDR266
512MB (2x256MB) Kingston DDR-266 CL2
AthlonXP 1800+ 1.53GHz 256kB L2 FSB-266
Although the Intel system was $2000 and the AMD system was $1700, the 1800+ outperformed the Northwood in most real-life apps, especialy in gaming.
And not only Northwood, but all P4 were very performance/watt unefective, especialy the Prescott2M which is the greatest waste of silicon of all P4.
Pentium D was a follow-up of the Netburst disaster. All Smithfield CPUs got spanked by any Athlon64 X2 and dualcore Opteron CPUs. Presler was a little more effective, but again it was just an expencive space heater with relatively poor performance.
If Intel skiped the P4 and instead puted all their efforts into the P3 develeopment we would have got a Core2 CPUs three years ago.
With the discountinuing of the Netburst, and going back to P3 derivate Yonah, Intel just admited their mistake. IMO they should have killed Netburst with Northwood, after K8 arrived.