Charles Kozierok
Elite Member
- May 14, 2012
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...so the performance DOES scale up reasonably well, but not as well as a real octo-core going from 4 to 8 threads (with suitable software which can efficiently exploit the extra threads).
I agree, there is a "performance penalty", but it is much less severe with the AMD FX, compared to the Intels.
Agreed, which is why I think trying to compare them directly doesn't really work. An Intel quad+HT is more than a quad, and an AMD eight-core is less than a true eight-core but more than an Intel quad+HT.
The bulk of the software at the time (I think) either did not use floating point, or had its own floating point software to handle it. (387 rarely was supported, I think).
Correct, you had to either write your own FP code or buy the coprocessor. x86 software was in its infancy back then so the comparison to now makes no sense.
Plus, of course, nobody said an integer core without FP was worth "0 cores".
