Originally posted by: taltamir
nobody is making up their own definition. Engineering failure could mean several things. Failure by the engineers, failure to meet engineering standards NOT because of engineers, etc.
Originally posted by: zsdersw
And no, it was not an engineering failure. Not achieving the impossible != failure.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
Originally posted by: zsdersw
And no, it was not an engineering failure. Not achieving the impossible != failure.
Im sorry, a success in my book means something that worked and ur improving.
Failure means u need to take a step back and re evaluate.
So when your on P4 tech for years, and u take a step back to P3 what is that called in your definition?
to me its a failure.
Why because u need to take a step back to the older tech and mature it, because your current tech blows.
That is what happened to the end of P4.
GET IT STRAIGHT PEOPLE... C2D is not a MATURE P4... ITS A P3!
If intel got it straight it would of gone... P1 -> P2 -> P3 -> C2D (NOT P4)
Instead we did this...
P1 -> P2 -> P3 -> P4 -> P3 -> C2D
U guys still want to call that a non failure?
U repeat something when u failed... ummm P3 got repeated on YONAH.
YONAH is the first C2D.
If u were to ask intel directly... they would probably smile it and avoid the question and say.. well we got i7's.
Even they know its a failure... they took a lot of hit when K8's started eatting market shares.
Originally posted by: myocardia
You know, I've noticed over the years that only children and helmet-wearing short bus riders start name calling when proven wrong. BTW, how low of an IQ does it require to think the best selling CPU of all time was a marketing failure?The Pentium 4 was the antithesis of a marketing failure. Who, besides you, didn't know this?
But neither of these occurred. It consistently met engineering standards. Xbox 360 is an example of engineering failure, Pentium 4 is not.Originally posted by: taltamir
nobody is making up their own definition. Engineering failure could mean several things. Failure by the engineers, failure to meet engineering standards NOT because of engineers, etc.
Originally posted by: taltamir
What we are having here is mostly a communication failure![]()
Originally posted by: ShawnD1
Engineering failure usually means something doesn't work the way it was intended to work.
That might seem like a sketchy definition but I'll give you an example that I heard from a chemistry professor trying to explain quality control and quality assurance. Suppose I sell you a parachute and I say "This parachute will only work 1 time." You use it 1 time and it works. You try to use it a second time, it fails, and you fall to your death. Did I sell you a quality product? The answer is actually yes; it did exactly what I said it would do. It may not do what you wanted it to do, but it did what I said it would do. This is how we define things like "quality" or "engineering failure".
When it comes to the P4, it did exactly what Intel said it would do. They say it will work perfect at stock speed and stock voltage for this time frame and get the same calculation every time. This is the standard they put out, and it met that standard. If would only be an engineering failure if they promised more than it delivered. An example of this kind of failure would be when I bought a factory overclocked video card and it couldn't pass ATI Tool's artifact test.
Originally posted by: taltamir
ok... that is different than both the definition I figured for it, and I have seen people use throughout this thread.
What we are having here is mostly a communication failure![]()
Originally posted by: Idontcare
I liked my P4, it did the job for me. No complaints.
As to whether it was an engineering failure...not sure what profession you harken to, but I am an engineer and there is nothing about the P4 that failed.
It did exactly as engineered to do. If it failed from engineering then it would not function.
Maybe you don't understand what engineering is or what failure is?
Your thread title is akin to stating mathematics is a failure because 2+2 = 4 when what you personally wanted was 1+1 = 2. Yes 2+2=4 and yes 1+1=2, neither is a failure and neither is bad mathematics. But if you personally wanted "2" then don't add 2+2 to get 4 and then claim mathematics is a failure.
The P4 is exactly as it was engineered to be. Whether you wanted a P4 or not is probably the only question you should ask yourself.
(No I do noyt and have not ever worked for Intel, but I am an engineer in the semiconductor industry)
Originally posted by: zsdersw
Perhaps you missed my post from the top of this page:
That's not the marketing I'm referring to. I'm referring to the people in Intel who were stuck on more and more clock speed at any cost to keep up in the hertz race because that's how things were marketed.
The decision by marketing and management to push clock speed above all else is what drove the development of the P4; the best way the engineers could come up with at the time to yield faster clocks: very deep pipeline (31-stage in the Prescott, IIRC).
Originally posted by: taltamir
engineering failure by which definition? there are records of the xbox engineers saying EXACTLY HOW and WHY the xbox is going to fail, every time management decided to "cut costs" DESPITE what the engineers said, and every time it failed as the engineers predicted.
(June 2003)Originally posted by: Heinrich
It was a failure, because Intel is a multi-billion dollar company that was caught sitting on their asses !! If you don't see that you have blinders on !!
(article written by Anand)
With the introduction of the 800MHz, Intel has put the nail in the Athlon XP's coffin - whatever chances AMD had at regaining the performance crown with the Athlon XP were lost when Intel introduced the 865PE and 875P platforms. Luckily for AMD, the Athlon 64 is just around the corner but it's clear who the winner of the Northwood vs. Barton battle is.
(article by Anand)
You have already seen that the Core 2 Extreme X6800 outperforms AMD's fastest processor, the FX-62, by a wide margin. This is exacerbated by the fact that the $316 E6600, running at 2.4GHz, outperforms the FX-62 in almost every benchmark we ran. That certainly address the questions of raw performance and value.
[...]
Enthusuasts have not seen overclocking like [the C2D] since Socket 478 days, and in fact Core 2 may be even better. The 2.4GHz E6600, which outperformed the FX-62 in most benchmarks at stock speed costs $316, and overclocked to 4Ghz with excellent air cooling. With that kind of performance, value, and overclocking the E6600 will likely become the preferred chip for serious overclockers - particularly those that are looking for champagne performance on a smaller budget.
Originally posted by: myocardia
Anyone can cherrypick results, Shawn. Or were all P4's really slower than all P3's and Atlon XP's? See how easy that was?
edit: BTW, why would you be linking C2D benchmarks in a thread solely about Pentium 4's?![]()
(I bought an Athlon 1700+ at this time because it was cheaper as Anand states)Both the Athlon XP 2000+ and the Pentium 4 2.2GHz processors are very close performers in most respects, the final decision truly comes down to what your preferences are. The Pentium 4 2.2 will cost a bit more although it runs significantly cooler and has much more overclocking headroom, if combined with an 845 DDR platform you'll have one of the most stable setups we've ever tested. On the other hand, the Athlon XP 2000+ and a solid KT266A board will leave you with enough cash left over to consider upgrading other parts of your system.
Originally posted by: ShawnD1
Originally posted by: myocardia
Anyone can cherrypick results, Shawn. Or were all P4's really slower than all P3's and Atlon XP's? See how easy that was?
edit: BTW, why would you be linking C2D benchmarks in a thread solely about Pentium 4's?![]()
So tell me, where is this Athlon domination I hear about? We've gone through the entire sequence of events from 2000 to 2006 and we still haven't seen it. The infamous P4 Willamette was the same speed as the Athlon Thunderbird then the P4 Northwood was the same speed as the Palamino and Thoroughbred up until the P4c. When the Pentium 4c hit, the P4 was better than the Barton in every test, the P4 could overclock higher, and the P4 ran a lot cooler. The only reason any of us bought an Athlon was because they were cheaper. The only time the P4 was a clear loser across the board was the Prescott, and that didn't last very long.
Originally posted by: IntelUser2000
Uhh, sure P4 did have its moments of success. I don't count Cedarmill as they were about as successful as the Phenom IIs are now. Competitive with pricing, but nowhere near the performance. The only time was during the Northwood B and C days. B allowed to catch up, C allowed to exceed it.
Northwood HTT-This is about the time Intel eeks a performance lead Northwood C-The combination of high clock speeds, HTT, faster FSB and superior platform lacking Rambus, along with AMD slowing down has Intel taking the lead, briefly.
Please don't remind me of how much computer parts used to cost! I paid a lot more for a 600 Mhz Athlon in '98 (or was it early '99?) than I did for my Q6600 right after the release of the G0's. BTW, my father paid ~$4,000 for my first computer.Costed as much as the QX9770 for supposedly mainstream versions.
Originally posted by: myocardia
Over the years (seriously), I keep meaning to bring this up in this thread, and keep forgetting or getting distracted. The main reason that I believe the P4 was an engineering failure has absolutely nothing to do with it reaching far less than half of its predicted final speed. The reason that I consider it a failure is because out of the 8 or 9 iterations of the product, a total of two of them were considered by the people who count as being products clearly worth buying, worth owning, worth recommending. The people who count, IMO, are professional reviewers and computer afficionados like us, whose opinions convince most people on the planet which hardware is better (<<--both of us, not just the afficionados). That's a 25% or less success rate. The only place that I've ever heard of a 25% success rate not being horrendous is professional baseball, and even there a .250 batting average is nothing to brag about.
edit: The two iterations of the P4 to which I referred were the Northwood C and the Cedar Mill.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: ShawnD1
Engineering failure usually means something doesn't work the way it was intended to work.
That might seem like a sketchy definition but I'll give you an example that I heard from a chemistry professor trying to explain quality control and quality assurance. Suppose I sell you a parachute and I say "This parachute will only work 1 time." You use it 1 time and it works. You try to use it a second time, it fails, and you fall to your death. Did I sell you a quality product? The answer is actually yes; it did exactly what I said it would do. It may not do what you wanted it to do, but it did what I said it would do. This is how we define things like "quality" or "engineering failure".
When it comes to the P4, it did exactly what Intel said it would do. They say it will work perfect at stock speed and stock voltage for this time frame and get the same calculation every time. This is the standard they put out, and it met that standard. If would only be an engineering failure if they promised more than it delivered. An example of this kind of failure would be when I bought a factory overclocked video card and it couldn't pass ATI Tool's artifact test.
Yep.
Originally posted by: taltamir
ok... that is different than both the definition I figured for it, and I have seen people use throughout this thread.
What we are having here is mostly a communication failure![]()
I'll quote myself (3rd post to this very thread) from some 2.5 yrs ago:
Originally posted by: Idontcare
I liked my P4, it did the job for me. No complaints.
As to whether it was an engineering failure...not sure what profession you harken to, but I am an engineer and there is nothing about the P4 that failed.
It did exactly as engineered to do. If it failed from engineering then it would not function.
Maybe you don't understand what engineering is or what failure is?
Your thread title is akin to stating mathematics is a failure because 2+2 = 4 when what you personally wanted was 1+1 = 2. Yes 2+2=4 and yes 1+1=2, neither is a failure and neither is bad mathematics. But if you personally wanted "2" then don't add 2+2 to get 4 and then claim mathematics is a failure.
The P4 is exactly as it was engineered to be. Whether you wanted a P4 or not is probably the only question you should ask yourself.
(No I do noyt and have not ever worked for Intel, but I am an engineer in the semiconductor industry)
Originally posted by: taltamir
professional baseball,
and government...
Originally posted by: Dark Cupcake
Athlon XPs couldn't touch them (and they tended to cook themselves)