BlingBlingArsch
Golden Member
- May 10, 2005
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Originally posted by: formulav8
Its no secret that K10 is a beast. According to Intels roadmaps they won't have anything changed on the core for quite awhile. So yes, AMD will be out on top when they release Barc. K10.
The K10 looks just as good to even better than Conroe on paper, plus they have the odmc and ht interconnects. If K10 doesn't outdo Conroe by 20-40% I will be dissappointed. AMD is claiming 40% more performance over Clovertown, So my expectations aren't simply far-fetched.
But only AMD knows what the true numbers are at this time. So, we will have to take their word for it till we see for ourselves.
Just my humble little opinion.
Jason
Originally posted by: Viditor
However, we probably won't see that in a 1P dual core or quad core scenario. If K10 is as good as it appears on paper, then single socket "Stars" chips at the same clockspeed should be 5-10% faster than C2D...but we still don't have ANY clue as to the headroom of K10.
Originally posted by: lopri
While I was typing HurleyBird posted. My post is referring to my previous post. It's interesting that the folks @XS are claiming 10%, which I was actually suspecting from AMD's slide. Do you have a link to a specific thread, HurleyBird?
Originally posted by: lopri
Actually that claim just calls for more questions, though.
1. How does that '40% faster' is assessed? We know that these are quad-cores. If they're talking about 40% in highly multi-threaded applications, it might just well be 10% in single-threaded applications. (think games vs Cinebench)
2. What about integer performance? Why is floating point selectively commented? IIRC, AMD is launching their server-line K10 first (Barcelona), and if anything, the strong floating point performance will benefit workstations more than servers.
I'm anxiously waiting for K10 but at the same time trying not to set the expectation too high.
Thanks for the link. It'd have been even nicer of you had you informed me that thread is 28-pages long.Originally posted by: HurleyBird
Originally posted by: lopri
While I was typing HurleyBird posted. My post is referring to my previous post. It's interesting that the folks @XS are claiming 10%, which I was actually suspecting from AMD's slide. Do you have a link to a specific thread, HurleyBird?
Sure
It's buried somewhere in this thread. Steven says 10% and IIRC someone else does too.
The 40% AMD was claiming probably only counts FPU performance without SSE, 3DNow!, et all. which is pretty unsurprising. AMD has always had strong floating point.
Originally posted by: lopri
I doubt that at this point the advantage in scaling will matter much. The scaling was big when there was one core per one socket. Now that we're heading to quad, octa cores. Ever since AMD switched to 'direct connect' architecture, practically the only way to improve performance has been clockspeeds. Probably due in part to the way architecture was built around scaling, K8 hasn't seen much benefit from bigger caches. What does that mean? That means even though the node changes and manufacturing process improves, only thing that mattered to AMD was clockspeeds. It's a stark contrast to current Core 2 Duo design which gets enormous boost from added cache. In other words when Intel goes to 45nm, they get 2 'free' boosts - clockspeed boost and additional die space for even more cache due to shrink.
This is why I am looking closely to K10's cache architecture. And there definitely is a sign that they're working on something different. Unless AMD plans to bring out a brand new architecture every other year, K10 should take advantage of larger cache. Intel is all ready'd up to shove more cache up their Core 2 design thanks to their early 45nm manufacturing. (not to mention higher clocks)
Originally posted by: Hulk
Didn't the intial Athlon come from that company called "NextGen" or something like that?
Besides the Athlon line AMD has really never had better performing parts than Intel. AMD has always been a step behind. I don't think they seized the moment when they had it and now Intel is looming over them again.
I just don't think AMD has the technology, people, and fabs to bring ground breaking designs to market as FAST as Intel. Not that they can't do it, just not as fast as Intel and speed is the name of the game in this business.
When is K10 due? This year? Next year? It's not like Intel is standing still.
Don't get me wrong I hope AMD comes out with an ass kicking processor and sends Intel back to the drawing board. I just think it's a longshot. Intel made a wrong turn with Netburst and that really saved AMD. I don't think Intel will underestimate them again.
Originally posted by: secretanchitman
lets hope amd can get the 65nm processors a bit better. apparently, they arent so much of a different from their 90nm counterparts.
Originally posted by: Viditor
Keep in mind that those drawing boards take 5 years at least. The plans for the next 3 years are already made by both companies...
Intel planned for NetBurst to reach 10 GHz. We all know how that turned out.Originally posted by: Viditor
Don't get me wrong I hope AMD comes out with an ass kicking processor and sends Intel back to the drawing board. I just think it's a longshot. Intel made a wrong turn with Netburst and that really saved AMD. I don't think Intel will underestimate them again.
Keep in mind that those drawing boards take 5 years at least. The plans for the next 3 years are already made by both companies...
Originally posted by: StopSign
Intel planned for NetBurst to reach 10 GHz. We all know how that turned out.Originally posted by: Viditor
Don't get me wrong I hope AMD comes out with an ass kicking processor and sends Intel back to the drawing board. I just think it's a longshot. Intel made a wrong turn with Netburst and that really saved AMD. I don't think Intel will underestimate them again.
Keep in mind that those drawing boards take 5 years at least. The plans for the next 3 years are already made by both companies...
Originally posted by: Hulk
Originally posted by: Viditor
Keep in mind that those drawing boards take 5 years at least. The plans for the next 3 years are already made by both companies...
So Intel knew in 2001 that Netburst would poop out in 2006 and they'd need C2D then? It seemed like C2D came out of nowhere. I don't remember hearing anything about it up until about a year before launch, maybe 18 months.
I didn't know K10 was due so soon.
Originally posted by: Rottie
Originally posted by: j00fek
ill rest judgment till the new fab opens up in NY, then they will have more output to work with.
"Made in New York"? No more "Made in Taiwan"?
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: Hulk
Originally posted by: Viditor
Keep in mind that those drawing boards take 5 years at least. The plans for the next 3 years are already made by both companies...
So Intel knew in 2001 that Netburst would poop out in 2006 and they'd need C2D then? It seemed like C2D came out of nowhere. I don't remember hearing anything about it up until about a year before launch, maybe 18 months.
I didn't know K10 was due so soon.
Maybe I should have added "for better or for worse...".
Intel didn't know how Netburst would develop, just that the die was cast.
It takes ~5 years to go from initial concept to chip. That is why both Intel and AMD run parallel projects to see how things will develop. After the first year or 2, the project that seems best is given the green light and the others are usually shelved.
A case in point was Yamhill...it was shelved when the decision for Netburst was made.
Yamhill was actually the precursor to C2D.
As to hearing about C2D, the facts aren't usually made public until 2 or 3 years before release, but Core and Core 2 were a special case. First, it was a pickup from the Yamhill project. Second, Intel cancelled numerous projects (e.g. Whitefield) to rush Core along as fast as they could by reassigning teams to all work on Core.
So you're right that Core was a once-off (and a very expensive one at that!).
The founder of AMD (Jerry Sanders III) had a great quote that described the process...
"The semiconductor industry is like a wierd form of Russian Roullette. You pull the trigger and 3 years later you find out if you blew your brains out"
Originally posted by: Idontcare
I thought Yamhill was the 64bit variant of netburst cores at the time. Could have swore reading about it forever and ever at the INQ.
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: Idontcare
I thought Yamhill was the 64bit variant of netburst cores at the time. Could have swore reading about it forever and ever at the INQ.
It was 64bit, but it wasn't Netburst (in fact it was the opposite philosophy...more like the K7 core with a high IPC rather than a high clock).
It was dropped by management for 3 major reasons:
1. Intel had signed a development deal with Rambus, and RDRAM was a much better match with the Netburst architecture than it was with the high IPC Yamhill (or Hammer). This would have given Intel both a financial and tech edge on AMD if they could have pulled it off...
2. Those days were the height of the "Mhz Myth", and marketing for a high clockspeed was far easier and more effective than high IPC.
3. Intel was already developing high-k/metal gates, and they were too optimistic about when they would be able to solve the leakage problem. Initially, Intel expected Netburst to eventually hit 10GHz...ooops.
Intel 64 (formerly known as Extended Memory 64-bit Technology (EM64T) or IA-32e) is Intel's implementation of x86-64.
The project began with the codename Yamhill, named...
Intel 64 was originally implemented on the E revision (Prescott) of Pentium 4 line of microprocessors, which...