Originally posted by: UncivilizedAMD
Originally posted by: AMD K5
AMD's virtualization Tech will be able to do things with hardware that Intel will have to rely on software to do...
http://theinq.net/?article=23721
And the K8L also supports DDR2 Memory so all AMD will have to do is fit it in the AM2 Socket?
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=2388
1) the inquirer article is from June 2005 and is outdated. Technology changes real fast. Also, the article is from the inquirer so the credibility of it is susceptible to questioning. Also the article does not mention any direct comparison between virtualization on AM2 processors and Conroe processors so your claims of virtualization being better on AM2 processors is not proven.
2)Just because K8L supports DDR2 memory does not mean it'll work on AM2 motherboards. Conroe supports DDR2 memory but it won't work on numerous existing Intel motherboards that support DDR2. Nowhere in the article did it say that K8L will work on AM2 motherboards.
The article did say that "Unlike Deerhound, Greyhound will use the K8L architecture, and all the goodies that come with it, including the 5.2GT/s HyperTransport support. Unless AMD's plans change drastically between now and 2008, the processors will require a new socket."
therefore looks like your claim of k8L working on AM2 motherboards is also false.
2) Here's one from April of this year
link. It is talking about the dual core K8L...
"The part will, unsurprisingly, use the upcoming Socket AM2 interconnect"
While I agree this isn't a "lock" for compatability, AMD has earned a much superior reputation for backwards compatability vs. Intel...for instance, the AMD dual cores slipped right in to the 939 motherboards and the Opteron DC did the same with the 940s...
Intel required a chipset revision for dual core, and a new mobo spec for Conroe.
Some have asked why AMDs K8L would be superior to Conroe if the cores functioned about the same...
The answer is that if the cores are equivalent, the much lower latency of the on-die Northbridge on K8L will give AMD a substantial advantage when it's released...
The bottom line though is we don't know about Conroe, K8L, or even AM2 for that matter.
I don't know how many of you recall the RDRAM release, but the pre-release systems were being shown as absolutely amazing. It was cancelled 1 week before release (and after over 1.5 million mobos had already been shipped to OEMs)!!!
I don't
expect that here, but my point is that until we see any chip sourced from an actual retail environment and benchmarked thouroughly by a known reviewer, we really don't know how it will perform...