^
Thanks Accord99 for saving me the time. But yea, CPU-wise, a high-end Core2 vs a high-end X2/FX chip is on the same level of comparison as a Pentium-D Smithfield to an earlier revision X2. Yet for some reason, people are saying buying an X2/FX now you're still gettting a "finely engineered chip." The relativity of that statement does not hold up. On the good news, however, the X2-5000 has dropped to slightly over the $400 mark; people are obviously getting a clue now.
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In regards to larger caches being a "work-around" to the IMC, I think its more another solution than a work-around. I mean, there is more than 1 way to solve a problem. And as for the 2p+ commentary, its been proven by the folks at XS that the Quad-Core Kentsfield scales very well (in parallel applications) to a modest 1066FSB.
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As for Netburst, it suffered from 2 problems:
1) Rambus got thrown out of the memory business by the memory cartel (You know all the price fixing? It was actually done to force Rambus out of the market). Simply put, DDR/DDR2 is a joke compared to Rambus technology. Whereas DDR2 raised latency by increasing clock speed, RDRam latency grew lower as clock speed increased. The expensive IC's in earlier RDRam is a moot issue now, as DDR2 is approaching the same level (500ish Mhz).
2) The Prescott wall. I know some from the Prescott design team, and there was just some technical issues that werent thought out as a whole. Add to that the lack-luster 90nm transition, and theres your problem. They speculated if you just shrunk Northwood to 90nm (and gained a few 100 Mhz) and later did the Prescott on a more mature 90nm, it would've been a lot smoother.
Thanks Accord99 for saving me the time. But yea, CPU-wise, a high-end Core2 vs a high-end X2/FX chip is on the same level of comparison as a Pentium-D Smithfield to an earlier revision X2. Yet for some reason, people are saying buying an X2/FX now you're still gettting a "finely engineered chip." The relativity of that statement does not hold up. On the good news, however, the X2-5000 has dropped to slightly over the $400 mark; people are obviously getting a clue now.
---
In regards to larger caches being a "work-around" to the IMC, I think its more another solution than a work-around. I mean, there is more than 1 way to solve a problem. And as for the 2p+ commentary, its been proven by the folks at XS that the Quad-Core Kentsfield scales very well (in parallel applications) to a modest 1066FSB.
---
As for Netburst, it suffered from 2 problems:
1) Rambus got thrown out of the memory business by the memory cartel (You know all the price fixing? It was actually done to force Rambus out of the market). Simply put, DDR/DDR2 is a joke compared to Rambus technology. Whereas DDR2 raised latency by increasing clock speed, RDRam latency grew lower as clock speed increased. The expensive IC's in earlier RDRam is a moot issue now, as DDR2 is approaching the same level (500ish Mhz).
2) The Prescott wall. I know some from the Prescott design team, and there was just some technical issues that werent thought out as a whole. Add to that the lack-luster 90nm transition, and theres your problem. They speculated if you just shrunk Northwood to 90nm (and gained a few 100 Mhz) and later did the Prescott on a more mature 90nm, it would've been a lot smoother.