I am also suspicious of it also having a blu-ray drive and a hard drive standard. And Sata 2?
It is possible that the CPU is Piledriver-based, but I doubt that.
there is no other format other than Blu Ray.
Digital isnt viable
I am also suspicious of it also having a blu-ray drive and a hard drive standard. And Sata 2?
It is possible that the CPU is Piledriver-based, but I doubt that.
Whats that Data Move Engines?
maybe an updated "Unified North Bridge" found in trinity
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very informative link:
http://semiaccurate.com/2012/05/28/trinity-has-a-brain-and-a-queue/#.UP2b3IF4_z8
Really?
Char-lie...*sigh*
The Power Processing Element is based on the PowerPC 970. Which is the main CPU in both those consoles.The PowerPC 970 is an wide out-of-order processor and has nothing to do with the CPU in the Xbox 360 and PS3. It's in the same neighborhood as the Athlon 64 and original Core processors so it's much much faster than Atom processor.
I agree that 100% digital distribution is not viable yet. It is an option for many consumers, however it is far from being ideal for 100% of consumers - there are a lot of people with bad internet, and capped internet. USA is practically the only country i'm aware of in which nearly all ISPs have no bandwidth cap, that isn't the case in EU, canada, etc. Furthermore, a lot of home users have only 1-3MBit internet which obviously isn't ideal for streaming or DD.
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Did your major ISPs stop using throttling and traffic shaping? Wasn't too long ago that I still heard a lot of complaints from military personnel stationed nearby at how bad your ISPs are compared to ours (Germany). No caps, no throttling and no traffic shaping with the big ISPs here and prices are 20~50 per month.USA is practically the only country i'm aware of in which nearly all ISPs have no bandwidth cap, that isn't the case in EU, canada, etc.
I just looked up information on Atom - you are correct. It is a 32 nm max product - whereas the AMD Jaguar is a 20 nm product. Thus it is more advanced technology. It also features an in-order CISC pipeline, whereas the AMD Jaguar is out-of-order. Nevertheless according to these benchmarks:Also one Jaguar core is not even close of being on par with poor Atom( both at 1.6Ghz). It's miles ahead of Atom IPC wise. It's like a race between a ferrari and a WV beetle .
I just looked up information on Atom - you are correct. It is a 32 nm max product - whereas the AMD Jaguar is a 20 nm product.
A no too much?![]()
Did your major ISPs stop using throttling and traffic shaping? Wasn't too long ago that I still heard a lot of complaints from military personnel stationed nearby at how bad your ISPs are compared to ours (Germany). No caps, no throttling and no traffic shaping with the big ISPs here and prices are 20~50€ per month.
True enough I guess.
Anyway, from the online gaming I do it seems that all canadians (that i've talked to) have capped internet and many folks from EU do as well. Not sure about China, asia, etc, though. And i'm covering only part of EU, i'm sure it varies per country.
At least in the US, the demographics of consoles consist of many younger users -- with not all of them having online access, and much of their demographic has only 1-3MBit internet which would be not so great for DD.
I think Blu Ray would be the perfect fit for the 720, despite the licensing costs involved.
Those scores seem awefully low compared to http://www.anandtech.com/show/4134/the-brazos-review-amds-e350-supplants-ion-for-miniitx/6http://www.hardwarezone.com/feature...os-lord-netbooks/benchmarking-and-performance
The Intel Atom is still better then a similarly clocked AMD Bobcat architecture, at the same clock speed, at non-3D applications.
ISPs are unlimited usually in Europe and Asia.
Capping is mainly a US/Canada/UK/Audstralia thing.
Its actually amazing that some places still needs opticals due to lacking infrastructure.
http://wiki.vuze.com/w/Bad_ISPs#ISPs_by_country
Ah, I see. I wasn't aware of conditions in asia, and EU varies by country it seems.
As far as US adoption, US and Canada are geographically huge countries so the infrastructure is more difficult in terms of wide adoption. There's also the fact that cable operaters in the US are monopolies with high pricing, so many home users opt for slower 1-10MBit speeds. I think the US still ranks in the top 10 in terms of speed and infrastructure, although the highest ranking countries are small ones such as switzerland - logistics makes it much easier to upgrade small geographic areas i'd imagine.
Anyway, I would love it if everyone had 50MBit internet. Bring on the DD. I haven't used physical media for games for a long time.
Are you expecting jaguar to be have even better performance/watt than 22nm atom, despite its process handicap of being built on 28nm? (if you are, then I'd buy that argument given that AMD was able to do just that with their 40nm brazos versus Intel's 32nm atom IIRC)
The Intel Atom is still better then a similarly clocked AMD Bobcat architecture, at the same clock speed, at non-3D applications. The Jaguar is a slightly improved version of Bobcat.
I worked over 10 years in the backbone and ISP business. And there is no excuse to why US shouldnt have fast internet besides lack of regulation. Specially people in New York should have sub 50$ gbit. I can as such accept difficulties with people in Wyoming for example. But all the large cities got every single oppotunity on earth to be a freaking goldmine, even with cheap gbit.
So please, dont use those excuses on me.
In China for example its mandatory for new constructions from april to have fiber and being connected. In Sweden the fibernetwork is owned by the publi and rented out as dark fiber. In Denmark the government sets up minimum demands. Thats whats needed, a government that wants broadband so people can start using it to save society cost. I can only do my taxes online for example, there is no such thing as paper.
Isn't TSMC's 28nm what Intel calls 32nm?
Isn't TSMC's 28nm what Intel calls 32nm?
Whoa! I have no idea where this is coming from, calm down.I was merely pointing out that many in the US don't have super fast 100MBit internet. I agree with you, I think it should be more widely available and affordable, and while many areas of the US DO have fast internet - most internet here is tiered.
That means you can (in most areas) buy 3Mbit, 5Mbit, 10Mbit, 20, 50, 100, and so on. Since most providers are monopolies, it can get expensive. So here's where the problem begins: most users opt for the super cheap 20$ per month 1-3MBit plan. I don't think that is ideal for DD or streaming.
Do I like this? No. Is this the way things should be here? I dont think so, No. I agree with you that it should change; I think wideband should be more widespread and more affordable for the masses. Besides which, you make it sound as if the US has terrible internet. That really is not the case, a lot of areas have wideband but it is expensive; The US also consistently ranks 10th or 11th worldwide I believe in terms of infrastructure (it could have changed recently, not sure).
I'm just merely pointing out that since it is so expensive, that many people in the US/canada/etc still opt for physical media which is why MS has to support it![]()