Originally posted by: hooflung
Problem is that an e2160 at 3ghz is slower than an e4300 at 3ghz because of the cache. The difference between the 1mb cache vs 2/4 ( e4x00 / e6x00 / x6xxx ) is pretty remarkable. The e2160 at 3ghz runs about as fast as a 2.5-6ghz 2/4mb version. A 3.2ghz ( oc or not ) AMD Athlon 64 X2 can pull 2.4-5ghz 2/4mb cache C2D speeds. 2.4ghz 2/4mb C2D performance is the sweet spot for gaming on a budget and ANY chip brand can hit that.
Phenom B3s and the .45nm on the horizon, there is no reason to really evangelize for Intel. If people want AMD its not the end of the world. My Opteron 180 4g doesn't feel that much slower than my e4300@3.0ghz 4g. One uses a 8800GS Superclocked and the other uses a 3850 512. I can play my games happily on both.
How is that a 'problem' exactly? If that is a 'problem' then the X2 5000+ BE has the same 'problem' since 65nm Brisbane X2s (like the BE 5000+) are also slower than the 90nm Windsor X2s (6000+/6400+) because of a smaller and slower L2 cache, as well as certain RAM dividers than underclocks RAM from the DDR2-800 spec.
Yes, we all know the E4x00 and E6x50 chips will outperform the E21x0 per clock, but at a significantly higher cost. An E6750 costs ~$190, an E4500 costs ~$125. An E2160 costs ~$70.
My point was that you can get significantly better price/performance (once overclocked) by getting the E2160 instead of the X2 5000+ BE. Despite the 1MB L2 cache, the E21x0 chips still have a ~20% IPC advantage over a Brisbane core X2, so when both chips are overclocked to 3GHz, the E21x0 is still ~20% faster overall.
An E2160 @ 3.4GHz beats a stock 2.93GHz X6800 in the vast majority of benchmarks.
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articl...um-e2160_14.html#sect0
An X2 5000+ BE @ 3.3GHz barely beats a stock 3GHz X2 6000+ / 2.33GHz E6550.
http://www.tomshardware.com/20...overclocker/page9.html
I like how you picked a random number like 2.4GHz and declared it a 'sweet spot' for gaming. I have an E4400 myself, comparing performance at 2.4GHz and 3.33GHz (my max 24/7 overclock) many games show improved performance at the higher clockspeed.
I'm not sure what B3 Phenoms and the 45nm shrink has to do with the discussion, but since we're talking about whats on the horizon, what about Nehalem? If anything the performance gap between AMD and Intel will grow over the next year, but that is a totally different topic altogether...