Athlon XP

Cogman

Lifer
Sep 19, 2000
10,286
145
106
Im in a debate with a guy across from me, he says that has Athlon XP has an IMC. I said, "no, that was introduced in the A64 series with socket 939" He is vehemently arguing that "my box said it had an IMC".

Please confirm my assertion (or prove me wrong if you can)
 

Martimus

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2007
4,490
157
106
You are right, although the Athloon 64's for Socket 754 also had IMC's. The socket 754 Athlons only supported single channel RAM with a maximum of 3 DIMMs, compared to the dual channel 6 DIMM support of Socket 939.
 

mrSHEiK124

Lifer
Mar 6, 2004
11,488
2
0
He's wrong, and I have an Athlon XP 2500+ box somewhere if he wants to argue. IMCs started with Athlon 64 / Opteron, on all sockets, including 754.
 

Cogman

Lifer
Sep 19, 2000
10,286
145
106
That's what I figured. The guy is an idiot. He was saying things like "AMD is going to come out with something that will totally thrash intel in a few years because really they are just using the same architecture as Athon XP" To which I argued that AMD made several significant changes from Athlon XP, on of the biggest being an IMC. And that's where the debate started.

He was also spewing the AMD marketing garbage of "AMD has a TRUE quad core, intel just has two dual core strapped together". To which I responded "And they are still thrashing AMD in multi-threaded applications, The phenom II which was just released is barely getting competitive to Core 2 architectures."

One other reason why he said AMD was better is because "Intel had an engineering team with lots of funds and that's why they made core 2". No joke, that was a negative aspect to him...
 

NXIL

Senior member
Apr 14, 2005
774
0
0
That's what I figured. The guy is an idiot.

Never argue with an idiot: You cannot bring him up to your level, but he can quickly bring you down to his.

Sounds like a real life troll....as opposed to an on-line troll. Some of these types are emotional vampires who suck the very life out of you: making you feel bad makes them feel good.

Recommend: avoid.




 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
Originally posted by: NXIL
Recommend: avoid.

+1

AMD made one goof. They got lucky with the K8-based X2 series, which was the first "monolithic" dual-core and outperformed Intel's two single-core "strapped together" chips (Pentium D) by a good margin. The goof was thinking that it was the monolithic nature of the chip that gave it better performance - when it was actually just the sh*tty performance of Intel's Netburst architecture that allowed them to win for a while.

So when it came time to design the first quad-core processor (Phenom) they went all-out for another monolithic (and massive, on 65nm die) chip design. Unfortunately, this time they didn't have enough room to do it properly - K10 with a pathetic 2MB L3 cache just wasn't enough to overcome Intel's "two dual cores strapped together" approach (Q6600).

The present Phenom II is considerably better, with the die reduction to 45nm AMD now has room onboard for 6MB L3 cache and that makes a world of difference, the cores are no longer starved for data and work progresses in a much more uniform flow. Unfortunately, this is the Phenom that should have been released a year ago to combat the Q6600. In the meantime Intel already launched the Q9400/Q9550 on 45nm die that do an even better job than Q6600 and has even stepped out another whole generation to the i7 (their first monolithic quad, featuring an IMC for the first time).

Funniest thing I see in the market today is that nVidia made the same goof. GT200 is the largest monolithic GPU ever produced but it cannot keep pace with a pair of lesser chips slapped together (not on one die, but on one card - the 4850X2 smacks the GTX 280 around nicely). Now, if AMD can just translate this experience over to their CPU division...
 

Idontcare

Elite Member
Oct 10, 1999
21,110
64
91
The Athlon 64 is an eighth-generation, AMD64-architecture microprocessor produced by AMD, released on September 23, 2003.[1] It is the third processor to bear the name Athlon, and the immediate successor to the Athlon XP.[2]

The Athlon 64 features an on-die memory controller,[5] a feature not previously seen on x86 CPUs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athlon_64#Features

Key Architectural Features

A high-bandwidth, low-latency integrated DDR memory controller

http://www.amd.com/us-en/Proce...85_9487%5e9493,00.html
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
7
81
AMD made one goof. They got lucky with the K8-based X2 series, which was the first "monolithic" dual-core and outperformed Intel's two single-core "strapped together" chips (Pentium D) by a good margin. The goof was thinking that it was the monolithic nature of the chip that gave it better performance - when it was actually just the sh*tty performance of Intel's Netburst architecture that allowed them to win for a while.

So when it came time to design the first quad-core processor (Phenom) they went all-out for another monolithic (and massive, on 65nm die) chip design. Unfortunately, this time they didn't have enough room to do it properly - K10 with a pathetic 2MB L3 cache just wasn't enough to overcome Intel's "two dual cores strapped together" approach (Q6600).

I think you're being a bit harsh on AMD and how design decisions are made.

First off, the Core 2 Duo is monolithic, the 2 cores are joined together at the L2 cache (an arguably superior solution to AMD's joining at the memory controller).
Secondly, the Pentium 4 dual cores were also hampered by slow memory. Even if they had been able to handle the higher FSB speeds necessary, with a chipset capable of doing so, fast memory did not exist at the time. The core 2 quads get a pass because:
1. Each pair is at least joined as the L2 cache, and most apps don't require a higher level of coherency than that.
2. They have access to memory over twice as fast as what the Pentium D's ever had access to.
3. They start off with far better performance than the Pentium 4's did anyway.

You'll notice Intel went monolithic with Nehalem and onwards. There is a scaling advantage to having all cores on the same die, and it's too expensive/difficult to keep a large, fast shared L2 cache to make core 2's method viable. Xeons didn't fair as well as the Core 2's because the workloads and requirements are different. Intel made the right choice with a shared L2 for dual core on the desktop, and lucked out (or planned correctly?) with the availability of high speed memory. Additionally, the easiest things to multithread don't require high coherency.
You probably could come up with plenty of situations (theoretical or otherwise) where the Phenom compares more favorably. Phenom is a flawed architecture as you noted, though. Not only is the L3 cache too small, it also is slower than they would have liked. Nehalem has an L3 cache done right, Phenom's (even the faster L3 cache of the phenom 2) needs to double in speed.

Put simply, AMD designed an architecture for the server/HPC market that just happened to come onto the desktop while memory tech was stagnating. Since then, AMD themselves stagnated and underperformed. (until the launch of the Phenom 2's, they still didn't have anything terribly faster than their fastest stuff from maybe 2004/2005 in single or dual thread threaded performance)
Now that both major manufacturers are using similar architectures on the desktop, and both the 360 and ps3 support 6 hardware threads, I expect we'll see more aggressively threaded apps. That's probably bad for AMD once again, as once we get beyond 4 threads, hyper threading should give Nehalem a very decisive advantage.
 

ajaidevsingh

Senior member
Mar 7, 2008
563
0
0
Originally posted by: Denithor
Originally posted by: NXIL
Recommend: avoid.

+1

AMD made one goof. .............................................................................................
..............................4850X2 smacks the GTX 280 around nicely). Now, if AMD can just translate this experience over to their CPU division...

Monolithic was and is better than strap on's :p It is a must for better efficiency and better for data transfer among the cores on the cheap. i7 is Monolithic and it does better in internal memory related operations than either PhII or C2D given the use of better interconnects and chip architecture.

Like it or not integration and basic monolithic chip design was done by AMD first among the two. Reports such as these:-

http://www.legitreviews.com/news/5090/

http://www.custompc.co.uk/news...-says-head-of-amd.html

and they have copied AMD before also:-

http://www.internetnews.com/infra/article.php/3335981

So people might be asking "Why doesn't AMD simply sue Intel" well thiis is why:-

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/hardwa...000091,39146227,00.htm

So, simple game is about Innovation, given that AMD has sided with IBM "One of the biggest innovators around* " they might get a fighting chance against Intel.


* = IBM has registered over 4000 patents in one year.
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
7
81
ajaidevsingh - I remember seeing some benchmarks showing that Phenom (even the original) had slightly better core scaling than even i7 (before hyperthreading is taken into account).

But I don't think Intel has anything to worry about being sued from AMD. They followed similar ideas, but their technology is completely different. Even if they had adopted hypertransport, I believe it's an open spec that anyone is free to use. And their own Quicktransport bus is pretty different from Hypertransport.
As far as an IMC and monolithic architecture, well that's simple integration, and it was done way before AMD.

To be honest though, both companies are developing cpus for the same purposes on the same platform, there's bound to be many similarities between their cpus. If they wasted time suing each other over every little thing, they'd never accomplish anything and would destroy x86 as a dual (triple?) vendor standard.
 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
Originally posted by: Fox5
First off, the Core 2 Duo is monolithic, the 2 cores are joined together at the L2 cache (an arguably superior solution to AMD's joining at the memory controller).

Right. C2D was the first monolithic dual-core Intel designed. But if you recall, it certainly wasn't the first dual-core they produced. Pentium D had that honor and was a strapped-together affair (each core was distinct and had it's own, non-shared L2 cache). This is what I was refering to when I said AMD had the first monolithic dual-core: X2 debuted before C2D.

Secondly, the Pentium 4 dual cores were also hampered by slow memory. Even if they had been able to handle the higher FSB speeds necessary, with a chipset capable of doing so, fast memory did not exist at the time.

Um, no. The Pentium D chips used DDR-400 (or higher) and DDR2 (400-800) for over a year before AMD made the jump with the new AM2 socket. And not able to handle higher FSB speeds? Seriously? Those chips were all about high FSB & clockspeed. Remember the race toward 4GHz?? It wasn't low bandwidth memory or slow FSB that hampered the P4D chips - it was their crappy Netburst architecture.

The core 2 quads get a pass because:
1. Each pair is at least joined as the L2 cache, and most apps don't require a higher level of coherency than that.

Riiight...making it another strapped-together CPU. In this case, two duals packaged on one chip. Each pair connected, but not all four together, which is the case for AMD's Phenom X4. Monolithic, remember? But this time that wasn't enough by itself to overcome Intel's superior architecture. Making it not so Phenomenal.

2. They have access to memory over twice as fast as what the Pentium D's ever had access to.

Granted, now. Not at launch, when the fastest thing (DDR2-800) was also available to the Pentium D chips.
Two more things to note here.
At C2D launch, in AT's extensive original benchmarking, the lowly e6300 (1.86GHz, 2MB shared cache) was able to convincingly beat the fastest P4D ever made, the Pentium D 965 EE (3.73GHz, 2x2MB cache). Now, consider those two chips: the e6300 has exactly half the clockspeed & cache of the P4D. And beat it in nearly all benchmarks. The e6300 also managed to approach the power of the AMD flagship, the almighty FX-62 (although it did take the $316 e6600 [2.4GHz, 4MB cache] to truly dethrone the $999 FX-62).
Second, since the A64 days for AMD and the C2D days for Intel memory bandwidth has had virtually no impact on performance. Really. Don't believe me? Take a look what happened here when AT tested an e6300 with DDR-333, DDR-400, DDR2-533 and DDR2-667 memory in real-world applications. Guess what? DDR-400 won.

3. They start off with far better performance than the Pentium 4's did anyway.

Now that I won't argue.

You'll notice Intel went monolithic with Nehalem and onwards. There is a scaling advantage to having all cores on the same die, and it's too expensive/difficult to keep a large, fast shared L2 cache to make core 2's method viable. Xeons didn't fair as well as the Core 2's because the workloads and requirements are different. Intel made the right choice with a shared L2 for dual core on the desktop, and lucked out (or planned correctly?) with the availability of high speed memory. Additionally, the easiest things to multithread don't require high coherency.

C2D was the first Intel monolithic chip, as discussed above (first with cache shared between cores). Nehalem is Intel's first monolithic quad. And yes, they have to go monolithic going forward with a shared L3 cache but that wouldn't work without an IMC to regulate the flow of data/work through the memory & cache to the cores. High speed memory has already been addressed.
I just don't understand your last sentence there. Can you clarify?

You probably could come up with plenty of situations (theoretical or otherwise) where the Phenom compares more favorably. Phenom is a flawed architecture as you noted, though. Not only is the L3 cache too small, it also is slower than they would have liked. Nehalem has an L3 cache done right, Phenom's (even the faster L3 cache of the phenom 2) needs to double in speed.

I think Phenom was constrained by size & heat more than anything else (they simply couldn't pack enough stuff onto their chip to make it work - focused too much on making it "monolithic" - apparently thinking that would improve performance). If AMD had been able to work at 45nm a year ago they could have released PII then (remember, PII is nothing more than PI on 45nm with more L3 cache added) and we might have a bit of a different situation these days.

Put simply, AMD designed an architecture for the server/HPC market that just happened to come onto the desktop while memory tech was stagnating. Since then, AMD themselves stagnated and underperformed. (until the launch of the Phenom 2's, they still didn't have anything terribly faster than their fastest stuff from maybe 2004/2005 in single or dual thread threaded performance).

Wrong and right. Memory "tech" had nothing to do with it. Thanks to their IMC the X2 chips saw virtually no real-world benefit going from S939/DDR-400 to AM2/DDR2-800. And stagnating memory tech? In the last two years we've gone from DDR2-800 to DDR2-1200 and then to even faster DDR3 (up to 2000MHz the last time I looked, not that it makes any real difference in performance). You are right when you say AMD has "stagnated and underperformed" but it's been more like since 2006, they just haven't kept pace with Intel's relentless advances.

Now that both major manufacturers are using similar architectures on the desktop, and both the 360 and ps3 support 6 hardware threads, I expect we'll see more aggressively threaded apps. That's probably bad for AMD once again, as once we get beyond 4 threads, hyper threading should give Nehalem a very decisive advantage.

Dead right. GTA4 is a prime example in the gaming realm, it simply doesn't run well unless you have a quad available. I mean, a stock Q6600 can do as well as a 3.6GHz e8500. And that's an early title, I think as 2009 progresses we are going to see a major shift toward heavier and heavier multithreading in nearly all new software.
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
7
81
Um, no. The Pentium D chips used DDR-400 (or higher) and DDR2 (400-800) for over a year before AMD made the jump with the new AM2 socket. And not able to handle higher FSB speeds? Seriously? Those chips were all about high FSB & clockspeed. Remember the race toward 4GHz?? It wasn't low bandwidth memory or slow FSB that hampered the P4D chips - it was their crappy Netburst architecture.

Fast memory is worthless without a high fsb, I recall the P4's fsb topping out at 6.4GB/s bandwidth. Core 2's certainly go higher, and I'd wager that a quad would be crippled with a low fsb (or insufficient memory), but I suppose I have nothing to show there.

I just don't understand your last sentence there. Can you clarify?

It's one thing to have multithreading, it's another to have multithreading where each thread needs to heavily share data. Things like video encoding don't need a lot of shared data, and scale just about as well across multiple sockets as they do on monolithic cores. Applications that require a high amount of shared data between threads scale best on monolithic cores by a large margin.
Current desktop apps, if they use more than 2 threads at all, don't usually require much coherency between more than 2 threads. (though this might be on purpose, knowing the hardware that's available)

In the last two years we've gone from DDR2-800 to DDR2-1200 and then to even faster DDR3 (up to 2000MHz the last time I looked, not that it makes any real difference in performance). You are right when you say AMD has "stagnated and underperformed" but it's been more like since 2006, they just haven't kept pace with Intel's relentless advances.

I was referring to stagnating memory tech in the pre Athlon 64 time period. DDR-400 was out before even the Athlon 64, and remained the fastest memory available for quite a while. DDR2 took a while to catch on, and was stuck on DDR2-533 for some time, though it wasn't until the core 2's that a cpu was launched with a fsb that could take advantage of that anyway.

Dead right. GTA4 is a prime example in the gaming realm, it simply doesn't run well unless you have a quad available. I mean, a stock Q6600 can do as well as a 3.6GHz e8500. And that's an early title, I think as 2009 progresses we are going to see a major shift toward heavier and heavier multithreading in nearly all new software.

http://www.pcgameshardware.com...uad_in_CPU_benchmarks/

Well, I would like to say that perhaps GTA4 is just designed around a monolithic design (cell) and that's why it performs so well on the i7 versus core 2 quad...but given the rather poor showing of the Phenoms in GTA4, I'd say the game is just thread hungry (6 threads on 360 and ps3, 8 on i7, 4 on core 2 quad and phenom).

Cell has very high thread coherency (it practically demands it), but Xenon wouldn't, so if GTA4 was particularly partial to a monolithic design, it should perform poorly on the Xbox 360.

Ok, fact of the matter is, AMD's monolithic design gets it very little on the desktop. However, the Athlon X2's showed way better scaling then the Pentium D's (though I think if the Pentium D's had the same memory bandwidth as the core 2's it would have helped a bit), and the Phenoms show slightly better scaling than the Core 2's (not enough to overcome the massive speed advantage), but on the whole don't scale much better in most apps. You really need specialized apps for AMD's design to show an advantage (but it can happen, there are rare instances where even the original Phenom will outperform Core 2 Quads clock for clock). That, or just go multisocket.

So I suppose I'll concede to you. AMD's monolithic designs are a side effect of designing for the HPC/server market, and monolithic design by itself means little on the desktop. Athlon X2's kicked the Pentium D's butt because Athlon 64's kicked P4 butt. Phenom as a monolithic quad really nets it nothing over a core 2 quad.
 

cusideabelincoln

Diamond Member
Aug 3, 2008
3,275
46
91
Originally posted by: Denithor
Dead right. GTA4 is a prime example in the gaming realm, it simply doesn't run well unless you have a quad available. I mean, a stock Q6600 can do as well as a 3.6GHz e8500. And that's an early title, I think as 2009 progresses we are going to see a major shift toward heavier and heavier multithreading in nearly all new software.

And in [link=[url="http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2"]http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2[/url]]GTA 4[/link], the Phenom 9950 (and I would assume the 9850, too) can match and beat the Q6600. So AMDs decision to go monolithic with an IMC wasn't completely bone-headed and Phenom does have its advantages over Core 2 in various applications.
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
7
81
Originally posted by: cusideabelincoln
Originally posted by: Denithor
Dead right. GTA4 is a prime example in the gaming realm, it simply doesn't run well unless you have a quad available. I mean, a stock Q6600 can do as well as a 3.6GHz e8500. And that's an early title, I think as 2009 progresses we are going to see a major shift toward heavier and heavier multithreading in nearly all new software.

And in [link=[url="http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2"]http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2[/url]]GTA 4[/link], the Phenom 9950 (and I would assume the 9850, too) can match and beat the Q6600. So AMDs decision to go monolithic with an IMC wasn't completely bone-headed and Phenom does have its advantages over Core 2 in various applications.

I guess it's a glass half-full, half-empty kind of thing. Phenom doesn't do as badly. It actually compares very favorably to the 65nm quad, so perhaps the extra cache and other architectural tweaks to the 45nm quads help a lot in this game.
In fact, if you compare my link to yours, the 3ghz overclocked phenom beats the QX6850, both running at 3Ghz. It's different versions of the game though and it's likely not every benchmark run is identical anyway.

Edit: Interestingly enough, the X2's don't do as bad in GTA4 as other games. Since Core 2 should be a superior dual core architecture in just about every respect, GTA4 may just not play nice with caches and excessively hits main memory.
 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
Originally posted by: Fox5
Um, no. The Pentium D chips used DDR-400 (or higher) and DDR2 (400-800) for over a year before AMD made the jump with the new AM2 socket. And not able to handle higher FSB speeds? Seriously? Those chips were all about high FSB & clockspeed. Remember the race toward 4GHz?? It wasn't low bandwidth memory or slow FSB that hampered the P4D chips - it was their crappy Netburst architecture.

Fast memory is worthless without a high fsb, I recall the P4's fsb topping out at 6.4GB/s bandwidth. Core 2's certainly go higher, and I'd wager that a quad would be crippled with a low fsb (or insufficient memory), but I suppose I have nothing to show there.

Really? The Pentium D 965 EE that I referenced earlier had an fsb of 1066mhz, the same as the first generation Core2 chips. And even the "regular" (non EE) Pentium D processors had an 800mhz fsb (equivalent to the e2xx0 series, which would beat them silly even with less cache - 1MB shared versus 2-4MB for the P4D chips).

I just don't understand your last sentence there. Can you clarify?

It's one thing to have multithreading, it's another to have multithreading where each thread needs to heavily share data. Things like video encoding don't need a lot of shared data, and scale just about as well across multiple sockets as they do on monolithic cores. Applications that require a high amount of shared data between threads scale best on monolithic cores by a large margin.
Current desktop apps, if they use more than 2 threads at all, don't usually require much coherency between more than 2 threads. (though this might be on purpose, knowing the hardware that's available)

Is that why, in the benchmark you linked below, the 3GHz X4 9950 (monolithic) still cannot beat the strapped-together stock-clocked Q9550? My take is, monolithic or not makes very little difference in performance. i7 is now monolithic but it's more a design requirement (to minimize onboard cache) not for any performance reason. IE the performance increase seen with i7 is due to overall architecture improvements, including the IMC, rather from the fact it is a monolithic design.

In the last two years we've gone from DDR2-800 to DDR2-1200 and then to even faster DDR3 (up to 2000MHz the last time I looked, not that it makes any real difference in performance). You are right when you say AMD has "stagnated and underperformed" but it's been more like since 2006, they just haven't kept pace with Intel's relentless advances.

I was referring to stagnating memory tech in the pre Athlon 64 time period. DDR-400 was out before even the Athlon 64, and remained the fastest memory available for quite a while. DDR2 took a while to catch on, and was stuck on DDR2-533 for some time, though it wasn't until the core 2's that a cpu was launched with a fsb that could take advantage of that anyway.

While the JEDEC spec only covered DDR SDRAM up to 400mhz speeds, manufacturers managed to push it to 600mhz and even above. And it simply didn't help in real-world apps.

For the second part there - really? DDR2-800 was available when the Core2 chips were released (look at the test system used in AT's original review - featuring CAS4 DDR2-800). And, as mentioned above, the P4D 965 EE ran with a high enough fsb to require DDR2-533 (and even the earlier P4D 955 EE used a 1066fsb). DDR2-667/800 was commonly used on these processors for higher overclocks.

So I suppose I'll concede to you. AMD's monolithic designs are a side effect of designing for the HPC/server market, and monolithic design by itself means little on the desktop. Athlon X2's kicked the Pentium D's butt because Athlon 64's kicked P4 butt. Phenom as a monolithic quad really nets it nothing over a core 2 quad.

That's a very interesting comment, there. It appears that Intel has done exactly the same thing, for exactly the same reasons - after all, i7 is tuned for server apps, not so much for desktop use (it just happens to kick butt there also).

Originally posted by: Fox5
Originally posted by: cusideabelincoln
And in [link=[url="http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2"]http://www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,669595/?page=2[/url]]GTA 4[/link], the Phenom 9950 (and I would assume the 9850, too) can match and beat the Q6600. So AMDs decision to go monolithic with an IMC wasn't completely bone-headed and Phenom does have its advantages over Core 2 in various applications.

I guess it's a glass half-full, half-empty kind of thing. Phenom doesn't do as badly. It actually compares very favorably to the 65nm quad, so perhaps the extra cache and other architectural tweaks to the 45nm quads help a lot in this game.
In fact, if you compare my link to yours, the 3ghz overclocked phenom beats the QX6850, both running at 3Ghz. It's different versions of the game though and it's likely not every benchmark run is identical anyway.

Edit: Interestingly enough, the X2's don't do as bad in GTA4 as other games. Since Core 2 should be a superior dual core architecture in just about every respect, GTA4 may just not play nice with caches and excessively hits main memory.

Actually I see an interesting "phenomenon" (pun fully intended) in that benchmark. Look at the scaling between e6600/q6600 & X2-5000/X4-9950 (each pair is dual/quad at same speed).

e6600: 19.0
q6600: 28.8
4/2 = 1.52

X2 5000: 18.1
X4 9950: 31.8
4/2 = 1.76

So the AMD chips scale better going from 2 cores to 4 than the Intel chips can manage. Of course, that's not a completely valid comparison because the Phenom is based on a different architecture than the 5000+ but it's still an interesting observation. It's too bad they didn't have an underclocked X2 7750 to test in that benchmark.
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
7
81
So the AMD chips scale better going from 2 cores to 4 than the Intel chips can manage. Of course, that's not a completely valid comparison because the Phenom is based on a different architecture than the 5000+ but it's still an interesting observation. It's too bad they didn't have an underclocked X2 7750 to test in that benchmark.

That doesn't work at all because the Phenoms typically perform the same as an x2 of several hundred mhz higher. Usually about 400mhz or so, which would make the 6400+ the most appropriate reference point there.
In which case, scaling is roughly on par with the Intel quads. Still, we'd need to see a Phenom based X2 to get any kind of real comparison, but I don't think gta4 is going to give the kind of workload that having faster on-die communication between all 4 cores would benefit.
 

Cogman

Lifer
Sep 19, 2000
10,286
145
106
Man, this guy is an awesome troll. He targeted me initially and got you guys to argue about it, genius.
 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
ROF:laugh:MAO

Kudos to the best troll around.

But it was a fun discussion, no?