- Jul 29, 2001
- 39,398
- 19
- 81
Originally posted by: SickBeast
Hmmm...I was under the impression that AMD and intel had a cross-patent agreement which allowed them to share their innovations and technologies. I guess I was incorrect.
According to Microsoft, AMD's 64-bitness works better than intel's implementation. They also stated that even 32-bit applications get around an 8% boost from running on a 64-bit OS. Nice. :beer:
Originally posted by: jswjimmy
wow a p4 with a64
what is next p4 with 3dnow
or maybe a a64 with hypertreading
Bah, they all do it.Originally posted by: Zebo
Bah they all do itJust shows who's the inoovator right now. Immitation is the sincerist form of flattery.
Originally posted by: FelixDeKat
"There's no shame in it," Halfhill said of the reverse-engineering. "AMD has reverse-engineered everything Intel has done for years."
Originally posted by: Mik3y
wow...i never would have thought taht intel would stoop to sumthing as low as this...
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Originally posted by: SickBeast
Hmmm...I was under the impression that AMD and intel had a cross-patent agreement which allowed them to share their innovations and technologies. I guess I was incorrect.
According to Microsoft, AMD's 64-bitness works better than intel's implementation. They also stated that even 32-bit applications get around an 8% boost from running on a 64-bit OS. Nice. :beer:
No you're correct, they do have a cross-patenting agreement. That's how AMD got SSE/SSE2 and will have SSE3 at some point in the future.
Originally posted by: Wingznut
Btw, this is the same market analyst who recently wrote an article entitled "Why Prescott Sucks."
:roll:
Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
The question is why doesn't AMD ask Intel for some things in return. Why doesn't AMD ask for Hyperthreading and SSE 3. That would really give a performance boost for some people.
-Kevin
Originally posted by: Acanthus
AMDs pipeline is too short to take advantage of hyperthreading effectively.
"Kevin McGrath, chief architect of the AMD "Hammer" line, recently gave a presentation at Stanford University detailing the forthcoming changes in the next revision of the Athlon 64 and Opteron. Apparently both processor lines will feature full compatibility with SSE3. In fact, it may actually be somewhat better than Intel's SSE3, as the AMD chip will dynamically translate some of the SSE instructions into operations specifically tailored to the "Hammer" design, in some cases lowering latency down to as little as one cycle. Intel's latest "Prescott" iteration of the Pentium 4 design requires many more cycles to complete the same work due to its higher clock speed and deeper pipelines."Originally posted by: SickBeast
As for SSE3, I'm sure they'll adopt it as they have adopted every extention since MMX. It's only a matter of time. Maybe the Socket-939 chips will have it?
Originally posted by: Algere
Originally posted by: Acanthus
AMDs pipeline is too short to take advantage of hyperthreading effectively.
Yea and also why take advantage of HT when processors will be dual-cored in the near future.