Originally posted by: coldpower27
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: coldpower27
Originally posted by: apoppin
isn't the dictionary definition of failure enough?
the P4
failed to meet
intel's goals
[who cares what the fanboys think is 'successful'?]s
hence
INTEL dumped it like a hot Prescott
Pentium 4 failed to meet
some of Intel's goals, so it's up for major debate. Pure dictionary definitions don't work for this world as there are many shades of grey and the world is not black and white.
You mean people that don't share your views right? :disgust: There is no further need to continue development for the Pentium 4 as the goals have currently shifted to performance per watt, and the Pentium 4 is simply not designed for that so when your goals change you shift your development resources to something which will accomplish those goals. Hence development of Core micro-architecture.
It's not realistic is it to expect to continue development on something that doesn't accomplish the new goals, but that's completely justifiable as the Pentium 4 was never designed with those goals in mind anyway.
Not continuing development of NetBurst is not any sign of failure anyway.
that simply isn't how it happened
you have a fantasy view of intel's P4 ...
intel's engineers came up against a brick wall ... they were
STOPPED COLD in their tracks ... they could NOT *continue* with P4 ... their engineers *failed* to come up with a solution and they ran out of time ... AMD was kicking the stuffing out of intel's overpriced CPUs. ... and they had NOWHERE to go with it
there were no improvements to be made ... they were taking their thousand dollar server chips with 2MB L3 cache and losing to $500 FX CPUs ...
they ran out of headroom ... they created an fire-breathing monster with no more Mhz to push out of a FAILED NetBurst
intel had *no choice* ... but to DROP p4 in favor of something that was not an abject failure
P4 had *no future* they had to cut their losses and cast it off like a tired old whore
"no future" is a
failure to all but the most hardened fanboy
... and intel did NOT *plan* the P4 as an "interim" solution ... they lost a lot of market share due to P4's failure to compete.
I disagree I have quite a good grasp of what Intel wanted to do with the P4, and it was originally an interim solution as Intel wanted to replace NetBurst with Itanium based CPU's once they got cheap enough to become mass market, but unfortunately that never occured for Intel so the NetBurst line was around much longer then anticipated.
Italizing and Bolding things doesn't change the validity of any argument, not to mention the dirty analogies as well, but I guess since your only means of actually trying to compete is attempting to make someone angry, that isn't unexpected. :disgust:
Intel's engineers came to a brick wall at the 90nm node not because the architecture couldn't work at high frequency, but it was thermally limited.
AMD's K8 CPU weren't doing much kicking till you got to Athlon 64x2 Manchester/Toledo vs the Pentium D on the 90nm node Smithfield. The Pentium 4 was regardless competitive in certain tasks against the Athlon 64 due to HyperThreading.
NetBurst was never designed for actual performance, but to sell clockspeed and it was weaker then Athlon 64 in gaming so Intel used cache which gives a significant boost in games to help it out, and your stretching the prices as the Athlon FX was introduced at 713 USD with the Gallatin Pentium 4 EE at 999USD. Considering the clockspeed mantra and the fact of Intel higher popularity is at work here, the higher price can be justified.
As shown by the 65nm process the Pentium 4 could be thermally tamed, but there was a lot of negative publicity from the 90nm node Pentium 4's so it was time to market based on something else entirely and hence now we have performance per watt. Basically it was time for Intel to redefine the battlefield for something new and fresh.
Athlon 64's impact took a very long time to be materialized, ever since the Athlon 64 was introduced to the point of Q4 2006 AMD gained 9.5% marketshare. Intel lost about 8% marketshare, with the difference being made up from VIA marketshare. So roughly a 10% loss, with the bulk of those gains happening after the Smithfield from Q3 2005 to Q4 2006 6.5% gain during that timeframe.