MadRat... Oh, well if theinquirer or register said it, then it must be true!
You'll need to come up with a better source than that, before anyone is going to believe those accusations.
mechBgon... "Real world performance suggested by the 1.7ghz label"??? Well, I guess the 1.0ghz Duron shouldn't have been called a 1.0ghz then. How about the 533mhz Celeron? There have always been same-mhz chips with different performance. I don't understand why it's such an issue now.
As I said before, many times the AMD PR rating is alright. But in the case of the "3000+", it is more obvious than ever that it's an arbitrary number with no actual methodology behind it.
Take SSE2 apps out? Why would you, if they are very popular applications (such as Photoshop, etc)? I mean if all the reviewers were using some obscure application, then I'd understand.
DynaOne... So, you are saying that the majority of people in the market for a $600 cpu use mostly Office apps? Not photoshop, or 3d rendering, or video encoding, or audio encoding, etc...? I'll have to disagree with you there. I think how fast Photoshop (or video, audio, etc) runs is infinitely more important than how fast Word or Lotus Notes can run.
mechBgon... "Real world performance suggested by the 1.7ghz label"??? Well, I guess the 1.0ghz Duron shouldn't have been called a 1.0ghz then. How about the 533mhz Celeron? There have always been same-mhz chips with different performance. I don't understand why it's such an issue now.
As I said before, many times the AMD PR rating is alright. But in the case of the "3000+", it is more obvious than ever that it's an arbitrary number with no actual methodology behind it.
Take SSE2 apps out? Why would you, if they are very popular applications (such as Photoshop, etc)? I mean if all the reviewers were using some obscure application, then I'd understand.
DynaOne... So, you are saying that the majority of people in the market for a $600 cpu use mostly Office apps? Not photoshop, or 3d rendering, or video encoding, or audio encoding, etc...? I'll have to disagree with you there. I think how fast Photoshop (or video, audio, etc) runs is infinitely more important than how fast Word or Lotus Notes can run.