not bad for 90nm? maybe so, but the point is moot since Intel has 65nm and AMD doesn't. Anyways, speed isn't really something I see as the most important aspect of a laptop. I guess if all you have is a laptop and no desktop then you will want it to be able to play games and the like, but when you arent doing that then i'd say battery life is very crucial. But when you run off the batter your not running at 2.0G at full laod, your running 800mhz at .95V and lite load. Still, id imagine both a Turion and Yonah are good enough at gaming to make the crappy laptop GPUs be the bottleneck instead of the processor, so the real battle comes in with battery life first, and performance second. Now if only someone would put as much money into researching how to make better batteries (or alternate pwoer supplies) as they put into designing low power CPUs...
Basically what it boils down to is that the Turion will almsot certinaly not be a consistantly better CPU then Yonah (and could well be consistantly worse). This means that people who currently use Intel will have no motivation to switch since Intels marketing dollars and name recognition will mean that Core Duo processors will sell better then Turions even if their specs are the exact same. So in the mobile arena it doesn't look as though AMD will be able to gain any ground (unless they get power consumption really darn low which is unlikely). So, AMD will have to try to expand its marketshare in the server and desktop industries if it wants to keep gaining ground.
persoanlly I think AMD only has a few more months to try to increae its marketshre before Conroe comes out and puts an end to AMDs current growth (except in the MP server arena where AMDs architecture will scale better)
well, thats my 2 cents