BlingBlingArsch
Golden Member
- May 10, 2005
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afaik dual Turion with ddr2 will hit the market in q3 2006. yonah is comin in january, thus Intel will continue to dominate the mobile market.
Which is less important than the P-M using less than half the power of a Turion ML and 30% less power than a MT in the mobile market.Originally posted by: Viditor
Actually, the Turion beat the Pentium M in most benchmarks and tied in others.
Dothan vs Turion
Originally posted by: Accord99
Which is less important than the P-M using less than half the power of a Turion ML and 30% less power than a MT in the mobile market.Originally posted by: Viditor
Actually, the Turion beat the Pentium M in most benchmarks and tied in others.
Dothan vs Turion
http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview...atid=28&threadid=1744373&enterthread=y
http://babelfish.altavista.com/babelfis.../le-turion-dans-les-desktops/page4.php
Originally posted by: BlingBlingArsch
afaik dual Turion with ddr2 will hit the market in q3 2006. yonah is comin in january, thus Intel will continue to dominate the mobile market.
Originally posted by: Accord99
Which is less important than the P-M using less than half the power of a Turion ML and 30% less power than a MT in the mobile market.
http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview...atid=28&threadid=1744373&enterthread=y
http://babelfish.altavista.com/babelfis.../le-turion-dans-les-desktops/page4.php
Originally posted by: Zebo
Bogus test - AMD gets DDR2 you'll see the same. I forget who but I'm looking but - xbit or digilifemaybe- anyway when measured at the 12V loop with a current probe AMD turion and Pentium used about same power.. as usual Intel underating TDP and AMD overating. That's the only accurate way since boards and mem config are so different currently.
BTW you need some math lessons 99W is not half of 147W let alone less than half and neither is it 30% less than 124W.
Empirical measurements trump paper specifications. Notebooks based on the P-M uses significantly less power than Turion based notebooks under load.Originally posted by: glugglug
From your link, Dothan TDP is 27 watts, Turion MT is 25. How is 27 30% less than 25 (or half of 35)? And that's not even counting the facts that
a) the power consumption of the Turion includes the memory controller, which is instead consumed by the chipset on the Pentium M, and
b) AMD TDPs are the maximum that the boards need to be designed for, i.e. the peak the top-end CPU in the line might possibly use maxing it out with CPUBurn, while Intel rates TDP as power consumed under more normal conditions.[/L]
Heat is a function of the cooling system. The Dothan uses less power in the CPU intensive tests, despite having a discrete video card, and was generally faster.Even the paid-off Intel shill Tom's Hardware found the Turion to run substantially cooler than the Dothan in their tests: http://www.de.tomshardware.com/mobile/20051126/index.html
Originally posted by: Accord99
Originally posted by: Zebo
Bogus test - AMD gets DDR2 you'll see the same. I forget who but I'm looking but - xbit or digilifemaybe- anyway when measured at the 12V loop with a current probe AMD turion and Pentium used about same power.. as usual Intel underating TDP and AMD overating. That's the only accurate way since boards and mem config are so different currently.
BTW you need some math lessons 99W is not half of 147W let alone less than half and neither is it 30% less than 124W.
I was refering to the CPU. You compare the difference between idle and full load. The 2.2 Turion ML has a difference of 42W, the 2.2 Turion MT is 26W and the 2.13 P-M is 17W.
And going to DDR2 is not going to save 30W, which is the difference between identically configured Asus A6 series laptops, one with a P-M the other with a Turion ML running Doom 3 at the same frame rates.
Intel still manages to capture some of their stronghold in video encoding
It gives you a good indication of the CPU difference by cancelling out the different components.Originally posted by: Viditor
I don't understand how the difference between full load and idle is relevant...
Doesn't matter, it's factored in the differencing. The memory controller uses on the 915 uses a few watts at most, while the Turion ML uses over 20W more power than the P-M.Also, the Turion has the Northbridge onboard, thus skewing the numbers again...
The battery life as tested in the article I posted show that the PM is 25% more efficient when at max load, and 10% less efficient when at idle...
The two tests in laptoplogic were not idle and max load. Their idle power measurement for the 8104 is not supported by other reviews, like PC Mag's review of the Gateway M680XL which in the same test, has an average power consumption 18.9W compared to the 8104's 24.9W. The M680XL has a 17" screen, a faster CPU and a 7200rpm drive. Or even laptoplogic's own review of the Thinkpad Z60t, which has a 25% faster CPU and more memory use 14.5W, 15.2W, 19.4W for the 3 tests vs the HP L2000 which used 17.2W, 19.0W and 20.9W.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1814894,00.asp
http://www.laptoplogic.com/reviews/detail.php?id=87?=full&page=9
Yes, and because the P-M processor is the least leakiest x86 processor, and also the highest performing/watt, and has a power efficient supporting infrastructure, Turion can't compete with it.Remember that 95% of this is a function of the platform and not the CPU...
Originally posted by: ncage
I think i can briefly sum it up:
1) Intel has a lot of catchup to do on the desktop and server fronts
2) AMD has a lot of catch up to do on the mobile front. The turion does not compete with the pentium m when it comes to effeciency. Something amd will have to work on. They need an entirely new architecture for their mobile chips instead of just trying to rebrand an amd64.
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
It seems everyone is ignoring the fact that Intel has a significant lead in development as far as 65nm goes.
Originally posted by: Accord99
It gives you a good indication of the CPU difference by cancelling out the different components.Originally posted by: Viditor
I don't understand how the difference between full load and idle is relevant...
Also, the Turion has the Northbridge onboard, thus skewing the numbers again...
Doesn't matter, it's factored in the differencing. The memory controller uses on the 915 uses a few watts at most, while the Turion ML uses over 20W more power than the P-M.
The battery life as tested in the article I posted show that the PM is 25% more efficient when at max load, and 10% less efficient when at idle...
The two tests in laptoplogic were not idle and max load. Their idle power measurement for the 8104 is not supported by other reviews, like PC Mag's review of the Gateway M680XL which in the same test, has an average power consumption 18.9W compared to the 8104's 24.9W. The M680XL has a 17" screen, a faster CPU and a 7200rpm drive. Or even laptoplogic's own review of the Thinkpad Z60t, which has a 25% faster CPU and more memory use 14.5W, 15.2W, 19.4W for the 3 tests vs the HP L2000 which used 17.2W, 19.0W and 20.9W.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1814894,00.asp
http://www.laptoplogic.com/reviews/detail.php?id=87?=full&page=9
Yes, and because the P-M processor is the least leakiest x86 processor, and also the highest performing/watt, and has a power efficient supporting infrastructure, Turion can't compete with it.[/quote]Remember that 95% of this is a function of the platform and not the CPU...
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
It seems everyone is ignoring the fact that Intel has a significant lead in development as far as 65nm goes.
And what makes you say that? AMD has already demonstrated to the press their in-house 65nm CPU production (more than a month ago). Just because they aren't producing 65nm parts in volume doesn't mean they can't...it can also mean (and probably does) that they have determined that they will make a greater profit by tweaking the process and improving to mature yields before volume production. After all, they really have no pressure to rush 65nm out the door since their 90nm chips are already more than competitive in both temp/heat and performance...
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
So what if they internally have 65nm? Do you have any idea how long it takes to qualify a part for mass production? Intel showed that Yonah was working for months already; getting a few samples for pre-production analysis is one thing, releasing millions of them for the mass market is quite another. Even by Anandtech's own reckonning, Intel has a significant lead in 65nm development (see the Yonah article posted this morning).
AMD is currently competitive with Intel's 90nm offerings, the new Yonah article is up and shows that Yonah significantly cooler and consumes less power than AMD's desktop solutions. Sure, AMD can pull off tricks like voltage reduction to reduce power output, but I doubt they'll be able to match Intel's 33% power advantage under load in this segment.
This isn't to say that AMD is doing poorly, they certainly aren't but 2006 isn't going to be all roses for them if they just sit on their hands. Intel has a significant advantage in terms of market share in the increasingly important notebooks space and with Yonah it doesn't look like it will change any time in 2006.
Yes, because the test is done is a CPU intensive application that doesn't hit memory or video.Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: Accord99
It gives you a good indication of the CPU difference by cancelling out the different components.Originally posted by: Viditor
I don't understand how the difference between full load and idle is relevant...
How do you figure? Are you assuming that under full load the video and I/O function at the same level as they do at idle?
It's from numerous measurements which indicate that the P-M uses less than 1W per 100MHz.Where do you get the 20W number from?? Is this from your assumptions above?
My point is that the Z60t, compared to a slower, less equipped Turion model uses less power in all typical usage tests. So you can't use that one test of the Acer models to universally say that Turion has better idle power usage.I don't see your point...your saying that the Thinkpad Z60t has entirely different numbers, but of course it does as it has entirely different video! Also, for the comparison they set both laptops to the same settings...
Q4
ATI R600 GPU is expected to be released in Q4, or possibly Q1 2007. The R600 is targeted at the high end market with full support for 'DirectX 10' WGF 2.0, targeting Vista.
AMD Opteron 874 & 872, based on an improved K8 core, are expected to be available in Q4. These processors are expected to released with a clock speed of 2.6Ghz and will be built for the Socket F platform, featuring a 1207 pin interface.
Intel Merom Mobile processor, the successor to Jonah and part of the Santa Rosa platform, is expected to be released in H2 on a 65nm process. Merom is a Dual Core CPU combining the architecture of NetBurst and the Pentium-M to achieve both high performance and lower power consumption. Merom utilises the FSB and EM64T of NetBurst, but is largely based around the Pentium M architecture. The CPU is a 4-issue design (compared to the 3 issue cores of the Athlon 64 and Pentium 4 architectures) with a 14 stage pipeline - significantly shorter than that of NetBurst CPUs (from 20 in Willamette to 31 stages in Prescott). The shorter pipeline will ensure that Merom and it's derivatives will not clock as high as Precott, but it will likely clock as fast or faster than the Athlon 64 - i.e. around 3Ghz. However, the IPC of Merom is likely to be better than the Athlon 64 due to it's 4 issue superscalar design and vastly better than the P4.
Merom will feature 4MB of L2 cache shared between the two cores and will feature a direct L1 to L1 cache transfer system between the L1 caches of each of the cores to improve performance. Merom will also feature a number of enhances prefectching schemes to enhance the use of the caches.
Intel Crestine-GM (Crestline?) chipset for Merom is expected to be released in Late 2006. Crestine-GM is part of the Santa Rosa platform and is expected to support an 800Mhz FSB speed, DDRII 800 SDRAM and PCI Express. Crestine is expected to interface to ICH8-M, featuring support for Serial ATA 300, and the Golan2 / Annadel wireless chipset supporting 80211a/b/g and 11n WiMax.
Intel Conroe desktop CPU is expected to be released in Late 2006. Conroe is a dual core CPU based around the Merom architecture but optimised for the desktop market by removing some of the power constraints from Merom in order to increase performance. Conroe will be available in two forms - with 4MB of shared L2 cache and with 8MB of L2 cache (an 'Extreme Edition' perhaps). Conroe will feature virtualization capabilities, LaGrande technology and 64-bit capability in addition to EDB, EIST and iAMT2.
AMD Athlon 64 X2 (65nm) is expected to be released in Late 2006.
Windows XP SP3 is expected to be released in Late Q4 or Early 2007. Windows XP SP3 is expected to be a fairly significant update containing new features as well as a roundup of security and bug fixes.