A lot of you forget the history of the processor. Intel laid the stepping grounds for the processor; AMD followed that same path, and developed a processor comparable to Intel?s. It?s already known for a fact AMD will be releasing a processor with a higher bus architecture at 266MHz bus. The reason is to utilize current and future DDRAM memory bandwidth at higher levels. Don?t be surprised if AMD release another processor with a quad channel bus at 400MHz (800MHz DDR). This would allow AMD processors to take even further advantage of DDRAM. Again following the same path as Intel.
The fact is with the current state of the P4, it allows the P4 to take full advantage of RDRAM?s high bandwidth, doubling that of DDRAM on current platforms. AMD knew this and thus 266MHz bus design.
If you asked me Toms hardware has always opened his mouth to soon. This was evident when RDRAM first emerged on to the computer seen. He wrote that big article about how bad RDRAM performed. What Tom and others including myself didn't release was RDRAM support sucked at the time, and was not being utilized to what it was meant to.
Look now:
Linpack
Linpack
Sisoft
Sisoft
My point is that a lot of you are taking a bunch of early analysis of the P4 and drawing an early conclusion. The reason why the P4 performs so poorly under many of today?s applications is because today?s applications don?t utilize the P4?s architecture to its full potential. It?s funny how a lot of you are also so fast to scrutinize the P4, and Intel, yet you don?t even understand the P4, or what it is that Intel is trying to do with the P4. It was also stated in another thread that Microsofts next OS Whistler will take the P4 to the next level with its newest kernel, which some close to Microsoft say it will be optimized for the P4+.
Read this and get a good laugh:
P4 Mihocka has attacks on him shocka
Hardware One