I don't believe the 500Mhz says anything about efficiency.
What's the difference between a 3Ghz cpu that can boost all cores to 3.5Ghz and a 3.4Ghz cpu that can boost all cores to 3.5Ghz? Is the first cpu really better in some way?
If I take the second cpu and call it a 3Ghz cpu is now just as good as the first one I mentioned? How about if I call it a 2.5Ghz cpu? Is now more efficient than the 3.0Ghz cpu because it can boost all cores 1Ghz?
I'm starting to wonder about the marketing going on here. This was a big no-no in the GPU section without a disclaimer in the signature.
It does. In order to boost that much you need a decent amount of headroom, which you aren't going to see if your chip design needlessly uses power.
The difference is that one has a stock clock rate 400 MHz higher than the other, but has a maximum turbo boost that is 100 MHz lower. Assuming they are the same architecture and that these numbers have been arbitrarily put in place, there likely won't be much overall performance difference.
I don't believe the 500Mhz says anything about efficiency.
What's the difference between a 3Ghz cpu that can boost all cores to 3.5Ghz and a 3.4Ghz cpu that can boost all cores to 3.5Ghz? Is the first cpu really better in some way?
If I take the second cpu and call it a 3Ghz cpu is now just as good as the first one I mentioned? How about if I call it a 2.5Ghz cpu? Is now more efficient than the 3.0Ghz cpu because it can boost all cores 1Ghz?
Notice JF ignored me when I brought this up?
Marketers don't want you to think logically, they want you to think emotionally, which results in bad purchasing decisions. (Bad for you, good for the seller)
I'm starting to wonder about the marketing going on here. This was a big no-no in the GPU section without a disclaimer in the signature.
Define headroom. Does a 65w cpu have more or less headroom than a 95w cpu?
Again, if a take a cpu and rename it, does it develop more headroom somehow?
I can infer that if AMD wanted to get the best performance out of the chip, they may have chosen a value that keeps the chip within its rated TDP and maximizes the efficiency of the chip.That's just it - "stock clock rate". CPU's now days really don't have one, they run at different speeds depending upon load.
That hypothetical 2.5Ghz cpu would most likely run at the exact same clock speeds under normal conditions as that 3.4Ghz cpu would (idle clocks may be a bit lower).
The only thing you can say about a cpu that boosts or turbos 500Mhz is exactly that. You can't infer anything else. Don't fall prey to a numbers game.
cpus are very different from gpus, however. neither intel nor amd has a "focus group" or other such nonsense, nor have either of them had rollo rumbling around getting lifers banned and generally stirring up trouble. If you're talking about jfamd, he's got amd in his name, plus he's got a link to his blog in his sig. AND he's not a mod like keys, which imho makes a big difference as well.
Let's look at your example with the 2.5 GHz and 3.4 GHz CPU and assume that neither chip will boost in order to complete the work load that it's been given. Obviously the 3.4 GHz chip will complete the work more quickly since it is faster
In terms of what, percentage of total or watts? If the first CPU dissipates 60W under normal conditions and the second 90W, both have 5W of headroom, but the first processor has a larger percentage of headroom remaining.
btw, for anybody who is wondering, I'm a gemini.
Oops, wrong forum...![]()
Gemini Information said:Possible Health Concerns...
You are prone to taking unnecessary risks and wind up harming yourself or others in the process. Sometimes pursuing pleasure too vigorously could also qualify as risk taking.
Not only that, but the "requirement" doesn't actually exist.
Keysplayr denotes that he is a member of the Nvidia Focus Group in his sig here in the AT Forums because that is a requirement of the Nvidia Focus Group, it is not a requirement of the AnandTech forums.
We have no such requirement for the simple reason that such a requirement would not be enforceable.
We do not require people to indicate their positions of employment, affiliations, associations, club memberships, etc in real life.
Could you imagine just how much more rancor and friction we would all have to step through if every member had to list their employer, their religion, and their registered political party in their sig?
People who want to divulge that info are free to do so. But we also can't verify or attest to the legitimacy of any of these claims either. Keysplayr claims he is a member of Nvidia Focus Group but we have not verified this to be true.
This is where you are in error.
Under most normal workloads both chips will operate at the exact same clock speed. You are assuming that the base clock speed is the minimum clock speed. That is incorrect. For example, as I type the 2.53Ghz I5 in this laptop is running at 1.2Ghz.
You are confusing TDP with power consumption. A "2.5Ghz" cpu running at speed X will consume the same amount of power as a "3.5Ghz" cpu running at speed X. The label we put on the box is meaningless.
The I5 in this laptop is a 2.5Ghz cpu. I don't know what it's turbo speed is - for arguments sake let's say it's 3.0Ghz.
As I type this my cpu is running at 1.2Ghz. I can legitimately name this a 1.2Ghz cpu and say it has 1.8Ghz of boost! This cpu has the exact same operating characteristics of that 2.5Ghz I5 - same TDP, same clock speeds, same price. But it is not more efficient because it has more headroom over it's "rated" speed than the 2.5Ghz cpu.
The only place rated or base clock speeds come into play is if all power saving and turbo features are disabled.
LOL...or is that a SIGH...erm, both, its a LOLSIGH
You sure about that? I remember differently.Keysplayr denotes that he is a member of the Nvidia Focus Group in his sig here in the AT Forums because that is a requirement of the Nvidia Focus Group, it is not a requirement of the AnandTech forums.
We have no such requirement for the simple reason that such a requirement would not be enforceable.
[/quote]The poster here who presents himself here as "JFAMD" and claims to be the John Fruehe of AMD could actually be an Intel employee for all we know, as members and as moderators, as we simply do not require anyone to provide their bonafides unless they seek us out for a special title or some such. (and even then we don't really verify by way of background check or employee references, its more of an honor system)
I disagree. Intel does this all the time. They don't strictly bin as per performance metrics, if they did, they wouldn't have many lower-end chips to sell.If the chip is fully capable of running at 3.5 GHz, no one is going to market it as a 2.5 GHz chip. They won't be able to sell it for as much. Any chips that are being marketed as 2.5 GHz are defective 3.5 GHz chips or a different chip designed to fall into a different TDP range.
I disagree. Intel does this all the time. They don't strictly bin as per performance metrics, if they did, they wouldn't have many lower-end chips to sell.
No one would name it a 1.2 GHz chip as that's just the idle speed and it's most likely not very efficient when it operates at that speed which is why it normally operates at 2.5 GHz or higher. The only reason it reduces its clock to 1.2 GHz is because it's not actually doing anything and having it run at 2.5 GHz would just waste power. Once it actually has to do something it's not going to do it at 1.2 GHz as that wouldn't be efficient.
Just about everything you posted above is wrong.
Normally operates at 2.5Ghz or higher? Okay, define normal.
Also please show evidence that a cpu operating at 1.2Ghz isn't efficient.
Anyway, you still haven't said why this chip, which I can claim has 1.8Ghz of boost, is any more or less efficient that a chip with 500Mhz or 100Mhz of boost, based solely upon the amount of boost.
whats the scope of the clocking domain? fine grained domains mean efficenty can go way up based on the needed resouces of the workload.
You sure about that?
I remember differently.
What about people that represent that they are from companies, and they get a special member title, indicating that they are from a company.
Last I heard, that requires some sort of official company confirmation to get that title.
Just about everything you posted above is wrong.
Normally operates at 2.5Ghz or higher? Okay, define normal.
Also please show evidence that a cpu operating at 1.2Ghz isn't efficient.
Anyway, you still haven't said why this chip, which I can claim has 1.8Ghz of boost, is any more or less efficient that a chip with 500Mhz or 100Mhz of boost, based solely upon the amount of boost.
I have no idea how that relates to my point.
