The damage has already been done it still needs a second revision you don't see our intel processors and phenom 2 processors requiring special microsoft updates.
That has happened. In fact, it's not uncommon at all, even occurring well after launch. The difference with BD is that people are paying close attention, in vain hopes that it will somehow fix the CPU's performance ailments.
A CPU that provides good performance with suboptimal OS support will get a pass. HT P4s, Athlon64 X2s w/ C'n'Q enabled, Core 2 Duos, and Thubans I know have all gotten updates for performance and reliability issues specifically related to multithreading, and probably Phenom II X3/X4s, though I can't quickly find any right this second.
One I have personal experience with was Windows 7 freezing for a few seconds at a time while multitasking on a Core 2 Duo. C2Ds were far from new. MS released an update that fixed it, and life went on.
With BD, you've got a slower processor
and OS performance issues. Once the OS issues are fixed, typical performance will still only be about as good as it is in Linux, where the single-threaded performance is still about the same as in Windows. If the typical single-threaded performance, compared to a Phenom II, had improved significantly, the patch would still be needed, and still would be made,
but you wouldn't care. It would be gravy to enhance good mashed potatoes, instead of gravy to flavor KFC "mashed potatoes".
That was then this is now.
And, if Intel had introduced HT in their current generation of processors, instead of having done it a full decade ago, those new CPUs would need a performance update, today.
It seems like such an obvious issue now, but AMD's talk that it was an 8 core CPU might have caused MS to not worry about such things.
8-core or not, each group of two cores share cache. Regardless of what you call the *MT in use, sharing near cache between threads will make it have similar SMP scheduler issues to Hyperthreading. Even if MS had been working on such a patch prior to launch, they would still need to test it extensively on production CPUs, and they couldn't have gotten those much sooner than end users. Also, like HT, the fix should only be needed once, and should apply just as well to any future CPUs that are made the same way.