Bulldozer does not have an IGP.The BD is not just a CPU. Isn't it a given that BD would be slower than SB since AMD dedicated a lot more die area for graphics, unlike SB?
Bulldozer does not have an IGP.The BD is not just a CPU. Isn't it a given that BD would be slower than SB since AMD dedicated a lot more die area for graphics, unlike SB?
You can have all the collective brilliance of Nobel laureates in physics, chemistry and mathematics at your command, but if you suck at leadership and vision then they will surely flounder under your misguided directives all the same.
What made MS different from IBM? Or Intel different from AMD in the late 1970's and early 1980's? What made Nvidia different from Matrox?
Leadership.
And in Jan of this year, for some very good reason that's never been made all that clear to its shareholders, AMD's Board of Directors elected to dismiss the leadership that gave rise to Bulldozer.
Off topic, that's hillarious!Bring out AMD's Secret Weapon - Laser Cats!
http://www.hulu.com/watch/121061/saturday-night-live-snl-digital-short-laser-cats-5#s-p1-sr-i2
Some dumb ass engineer convinced AMD sticking with the same number of FPU's and increasing the integer workload would do them any good. JFAMD stated way back that AMD believed 90% of desktop user workloads were integer based.
Coolaler is one of a few very well known for leaking engineering samples (including the recent Sandy Bridge-E ones, before Toms Hardware article), possibly has insider/close ties with motherboard manufacturers in Taiwan.Can I hope that the person who produced these results is really the president of the Intel Fanboy club & the real results are going to be a lot better then this?
Who's the engineer in charge if this abomination?I really hope these result are fake because if you can't beat your competitor there's only one thing left to do.![]()
lol hogwash, a bad idea is a bad idea. You can't blame business folk for being convinced accredited engineers are leading them in the wrong direction.
Since we don't yet know how well that 2nd core performs, I see two general possibilities. First, that 2nd core performs extremely poorly, adding very little multithreaded performance. This means that Bulldozer is similar to Nehalem with hyperthreading, that FX-8120 DID improve its IPC over Phenom II, that it's acting more like a 4 discrete core processor, that it SHOULDN'T beat Thuban's 6 discrete cores, and AMD is overmarketing the 2nd core as a "core". Mu gut tells me this isn't the case, though.
Second, that 2nd core performs at least 50% of a discrete core, let's say at least 50%, which means the FX-8120 functions at least iike 6 discrete cores, and that it has worse IPC than Phenom II, so the starting price of $220 is a major facepalm next to the 1100T.
AMD's only hope is that their 2nd gen Bulldozer cleans up whatever's wrong with this 1st gen Bulldozer, similar to Phenom II's improvement over Phenom I. Rory Read has a tough task ahead of him.
AMD's only hope is that their 2nd gen Bulldozer cleans up whatever's wrong with this 1st gen Bulldozer, similar to Phenom II's improvement over Phenom I. Rory Read has a tough task ahead of him.
You do know Dirk's background, right? What he did before going to AMD, what he did when he got to AMD, and why he was promoted up the chain to eventually become the CEO, yes?
for some very good reason that's never been made all that clear to its shareholders, AMD's Board of Directors elected to dismiss the leadership that gave rise to Bulldozer.
Since the two cores are equal in capabilities, they should be identical in performance. With these results, the problem would seem to be that the BD cores have gotten much weaker, weaker than a single Thuban core and possibly even weaker than half a SB core while Hyperthreading.Since we don't yet know how well that 2nd core performs, I see two general possibilities.
I think the only real way to improve BD is to improve the performance of each "core" or massively increase the clock speed.AMD's only hope is that their 2nd gen Bulldozer cleans up whatever's wrong with this 1st gen Bulldozer, similar to Phenom II's improvement over Phenom I. Rory Read has a tough task ahead of him.
So it's pretty obvious that these are real. The question is how gimped are the CPUs that were released to the benchmarkers, and how much has AMD been able to fix since the delay?
No - the FPU unit is much more powerful on paper than 2 FPU units in Phenom II.
The problem is probably somewhere else - rumors point to cache performing as crap.
These should be the latest B2.F steppings, though the final shipping one should be B2.G stepping. How much they have fixed is unknown (possibly memory and clock issues comes to mind), it does seem there's a few revisions since B0 stepping. Every silicon re-spin takes time, thus the inevitable delays. :hmm:So it's pretty obvious that these are real. The question is how gimped are the CPUs that were released to the benchmarkers, and how much has AMD been able to fix since the delay?
Dirk Meyer was an engineer/architect with DEC on the Alpha CPU team. After Intel bought out DEC, he moved to AMD and became the head of the Athlon CPU team.No, at least I don't.
Daimon
It is fairly obvious that this is a server chip trying to be a desktop part, when it is not.Alright AMD, the joke is over. Where is the REAL Bulldozer chip?
I wonder if these benchmarks are only with 1 module enabled, just like their extreme overclocking event days ago?
Something is off here. There is no way they'll be able to sell higher end FX processors for $225-270 with this performance.