So I would expect Skylake to win most benchmarks in any kind of comprehensive benchmark suite run under those settings, assuming either machine had the ability to stay clocked so high for any extened period of time (which is probably untrue for either machine).
And I wouldn't. Ivy and Haswell's major performance advantage over AMD is at single threaded apps. Ivy generally trails the FX at multithreaded. Look at these benches --
then add an additional 4.1 Ghz of clockspeed to the FX (versus the 4.6 Ghz FX 8350 in these benches). I doubt that even the hottest Skylake chips can touch those types of multithreaded performance numbers.
Granted, the FX is pretty lame at single threaded stuff. But -- overclocking the thing to close to 9 GHz.... The multithreaded stuff has got to be insane since performance scales well on these chips and the sheer brute force of running all 8 cores at more than twice stock clock speed. Skylake probably is better at single threaded, but I seriously doubt it can touch a
nearly 9 Ghz Vishera at multithreaded stuff. I think many people underestimate the actual capabilities of FX chips (because they are usually crippled by the Intel compiler under Windows). FX chips are multithreaded monsters under Linux. I suspect DirectX 12 will change a lot of people's minds about Radeons, as well.