Originally posted by: Soccerman06
From what I've seen with the Pentium brand and other major manufactures (IBM, AMD ect) is it takes anywhere from 3-7 years to make a new core from scratch. I also remember that my old P2 OCed almost 30% over it's stock speed (from 350mhz-450mhz). But that was when Pentium made too many of the P2 450mhz proc and downclocked some to 350mhz. I was one of the lucky ones who get a hand-me-down 450mhz.
You cant say that the PentiumM/Centrino is the next gen core because its a reworked P3. So in reality its a P3.5. I just had to say that since I know a lot of people who love the P-M and think its Pentiums next-gen CPU.
That all being said, Pentium is overdue for another core, its been awhile and it better live up to the expectations of everyone and deliver on lower heat generation, not necessarily a higher clock speed, but faster overall performance, and to be able to work in tandem with other cores (multi-core) just like the A64.
Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
The P-M does not have a shorter instruction pipeline than the A64. It is put somewhere between the A64 and the AXP. We do not know where because Intel will not release the specs.
-Kevin
Originally posted by: Fox5
Originally posted by: Soccerman06
Ok people i donno if this has been talked about before or not but what do yall want on it and what is going to be on it in reality (Yonah and multi-cores dont count).
I pesonally am hoping for an on-die memory controller, better (and less) mobo, better SLI, fully unlockable for OCing, much, much less heat dissapation.
I would like to see on the mobo an easy adaption for water cooling and possibly a PPU.
Umm, most of those things you listed have nothing to do with the cpu.
Originally posted by: BitByBit
Not necessarily.
The Athlon needed a faster memory interface. The main reason the 'C' revision P4 dominated the XP in gaming was due to its faster memory interface. Thus, the P4 would not benefit from an IMC like the Athlon did.
If you look here you will see that the K7 was at a massive disadvantage in this respect.
Dothan on the other hand doesn't actually need a fast memory interface in the same way that the P4 and Athlon do. It was designed from the ground up to limit memory access as much as possible, since memory access consumes alot of power.
If Dothan were to use an IMC, it would certainly benefit, but not by as much as people may be tempted to think, largely thanks to its huge L2 reducing the need for memory access.
