There is absolutely nothing wrong with comparing new things to old. On the contrary, it's important to do so. (May I, for instance, suggest you start comparing power consumption of the new AM2 parts to older chips?)
I would interpret those who have raised their voices on this issue as if actually having a completely different point on their minds: The fact that Conroe isn't here, but that AM2 is.
AM2 is no new cpu architecture and as such no direct performance upgrade to 939. That doesn't mean it isn't an improvement. It does come with topend extension to the available performance ratings. And it provides a vastly better performance per Watt. You will now even be able to get a X2 3800+ that ticks along on only a few Watt. DDR2 memory also means that memory power requirements will be lower. Finally there is the virtualization feature.
I don't see anything even remotely competitive available from Intel today.
Core 2 will hopefully be widely available towards the end of this year. But I'm somewhat disappointed in humanity. Due to the effects of Intels marketing trick to showcase Conroe very early. I mean - there's even one poster in this thread who claims: "Conroe is here". Another asks: "Where is AMD response?".
Well, no - Conroe is not here. Not yet. And a "response" cannot precede what it is responding to. Have some pride for C*S*! Don't be so easily manipulated.
Preliminary comparisions of Conroe to current CPUs like the FX62 are of great interest. It helps us understand what potential we can expect from a future technology. But if you interpret these results, as if you're making a customers choice between two available CPUs, then you're a damn fool.
First of all, if you have no need of a computer part today, you're a fool wasting your money on something you don't need. And wasting it on something that by past 30 years experience is going to become obsolete rather quickly.
Further, if you indeed do need a computer part today and have good use for it today, then you're again a damn fool to be waiting. Waiting in order to be a first adopter of a first generation of some new technology.
Let's see now, remember these?:
"Wait for Willamette". "Wait for SATA", "Wait for BTX", "Wait for DDR2", "Wait for Prescott", "Wait for PCIe".
It's not just that waiting for some new technology often will not bring you any tangible additional user value. It's that the real choice is not between FX-62 and any Core 2. The real choice comes the day it's time to buy a new CPU. What will you pay? And for what features and what level of performance? The real choice is the available CPU that fits that slot on that day.
- The "Waiting game" is a game that goes on forever.