- Jul 25, 2006
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Does nehalem have enough performance, or does vista or win7 take advantage of quad cores enough to put an end to dual cores like duals did to single cores?
Thoughts?
My reason for wondering about this is that, in general, a dual core system seems more practical than a quad core. Obviously, there are niche places where quads take a foothold; such as, some games, intensive calculations, and huge multitasking environments. But unless there is some architectural tweak, or win7 increases the performance/efficiency of quad cores, would it be fool-hardy to believe EVERY developer of programs or games will, on their own, optimize their releases for quads?
Also, if nehalem is designed for multi-core performance, how would a dual-core derivative of the i7 architecture fair against current E8XXX offerings? Obviously, it'd be quite easy to create a binning of cpus with cores disabled to increases their margins. But:
-Will we see an intel tri-core?
-Will a dual core i7-derivative suffer from an architecture aimed at multi-core optimizations?
-Will a 2/3-core i7 chip retain any of the L3 cache?
-How will core-disabled binnings utilize or alter the native i7 cache hierarchy?
One thing I'd say i7 is good for, independent of the mentionings above is it is driving down prices of DDR3 by furthering its adoption. This is def. good for low-mid range gfx cards- soon they'll be no reason to offer DDR2 over DDR3 when not equipping cards with GDDR variants.
Thoughts?
My reason for wondering about this is that, in general, a dual core system seems more practical than a quad core. Obviously, there are niche places where quads take a foothold; such as, some games, intensive calculations, and huge multitasking environments. But unless there is some architectural tweak, or win7 increases the performance/efficiency of quad cores, would it be fool-hardy to believe EVERY developer of programs or games will, on their own, optimize their releases for quads?
Also, if nehalem is designed for multi-core performance, how would a dual-core derivative of the i7 architecture fair against current E8XXX offerings? Obviously, it'd be quite easy to create a binning of cpus with cores disabled to increases their margins. But:
-Will we see an intel tri-core?
-Will a dual core i7-derivative suffer from an architecture aimed at multi-core optimizations?
-Will a 2/3-core i7 chip retain any of the L3 cache?
-How will core-disabled binnings utilize or alter the native i7 cache hierarchy?
One thing I'd say i7 is good for, independent of the mentionings above is it is driving down prices of DDR3 by furthering its adoption. This is def. good for low-mid range gfx cards- soon they'll be no reason to offer DDR2 over DDR3 when not equipping cards with GDDR variants.
