Originally posted by: n7
Blah blah blah!
Link to where i can buy a Pentium 5...oh wait, it's not out yet!
Just like M2 isn't out yet...gawd i hate this constant speculation :roll:
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Fanboyism is at an all-time high, I see.
Well if M2 is the best that AMD can do, Intel is going to win this round. The real spectacle will be Intel's answer to K10.
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Originally posted by: Furen
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Fanboyism is at an all-time high, I see.
Well if M2 is the best that AMD can do, Intel is going to win this round. The real spectacle will be Intel's answer to K10.
OMG, I still dont get you guys!! How can you say that M2 is going to suck without knowing anything about it besides the pin-count? I wonder if Conroe's 4-issue width will make a difference or if it's only there to enable hyperthreading eventually...
Originally posted by: Furen
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Fanboyism is at an all-time high, I see.
Well if M2 is the best that AMD can do, Intel is going to win this round. The real spectacle will be Intel's answer to K10.
OMG, I still dont get you guys!! How can you say that M2 is going to suck without knowing anything about it besides the pin-count? I wonder if Conroe's 4-issue width will make a difference or if it's only there to enable hyperthreading eventually...
M2 isn't just a switch to DDR2 memory support, though. Besides DDR2, AMD indicates that the Orleans and Windsor processors will also have "Security and Virtualization" features. Previously codenamed Pacifica, the virtualization technology adds hardware support that allows a system to run multiple operating systems simultaneously. It was possible to do this in the past with such tools as VMware, but hardware support should dramatically improve performance. The security technology mentioned is likely to be very similar to Intel's LaGrande Technology and was code named Presidio. Whether or not you'll need a tin foil hat to operate your computer is yet undecided.
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Originally posted by: Furen
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Originally posted by: AMDCrazy
Nothing can beat AMD...Period!!!!
Fanboyism is at an all-time high, I see.
Well if M2 is the best that AMD can do, Intel is going to win this round. The real spectacle will be Intel's answer to K10.
OMG, I still dont get you guys!! How can you say that M2 is going to suck without knowing anything about it besides the pin-count? I wonder if Conroe's 4-issue width will make a difference or if it's only there to enable hyperthreading eventually...
We do know quite a bit about M2. Anandtech has done several articles on it. The new pin layout is 940 pins. It supports DDR2. It has higher amperage to the CPU, which will result in more heat production.
M2 isn't just a switch to DDR2 memory support, though. Besides DDR2, AMD indicates that the Orleans and Windsor processors will also have "Security and Virtualization" features. Previously codenamed Pacifica, the virtualization technology adds hardware support that allows a system to run multiple operating systems simultaneously. It was possible to do this in the past with such tools as VMware, but hardware support should dramatically improve performance. The security technology mentioned is likely to be very similar to Intel's LaGrande Technology and was code named Presidio. Whether or not you'll need a tin foil hat to operate your computer is yet undecided.
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=2476&p=2
Ta-da!![]()
Originally posted by: Brian23
The way I see M2, it's only marginally better than 939. It's kinda like the difference between 754 and 939 was. Intel is completely redesigning their chip, not just upgrading the memory interface. AMD needs a plan.
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
We do know quite a bit about M2. Anandtech has done several articles on it. The new pin layout is 940 pins. It supports DDR2. It has higher amperage to the CPU, which will result in more heat production.
Ta-da!![]()
Originally posted by: Brian23
PV looks to be a killer chip. What does AMD have in store to battle it?
Originally posted by: Brian23
being smaller does not help AMD. It took them quite a while to come out with the Athlon after they bought the Alpha group. They haven't really changed the chip since the original K7. The've just been adding to it slowly. Designing a whole new architecture takes years.
Originally posted by: Duvie
Originally posted by: Brian23
being smaller does not help AMD. It took them quite a while to come out with the Athlon after they bought the Alpha group. They haven't really changed the chip since the original K7. The've just been adding to it slowly. Designing a whole new architecture takes years.
How do you figure this genius??? They just cancelled the tejas architecture about 3Q of last year??? It was a radically different approach then this. Fact is they dont take as long as you think. The fact is many of the chips are made up of several ideas and technologies that are and have been being tested for years.....I dont think they have had as much time in this as you want to believe...
Smithfield was thrown together in world record time.
Originally posted by: Brian23
being smaller does not help AMD. It took them quite a while to come out with the Athlon after they bought the Alpha group. They haven't really changed the chip since the original K7. The've just been adding to it slowly. Designing a whole new architecture takes years.
Originally posted by: Fox5
Originally posted by: Brian23
being smaller does not help AMD. It took them quite a while to come out with the Athlon after they bought the Alpha group. They haven't really changed the chip since the original K7. The've just been adding to it slowly. Designing a whole new architecture takes years.
Amd didn't buy Alpha, they just got a few people from it and licensed the memory bus.
Anyhow, AMD bought NextGen or whatever, who made the K6, the athlon was well under way by the time the alpha guys came around.
Anyhow, if not for the P4, you could have said intel has been slowly adding to and improving the P6 core. At least AMD's K10 has been many years in the making of a new architecture, the Pentium 5(redundant) it still ultimately Pentium based, though the core has finally changed at least.
BTW, the original Athlon core was built so that it could be greatly expanded upon, great multi cpu support was there from day one(just not utilized), and looking at the original athlon core, I'd say AMD planned to do more with the cache then they actually did.(perhaps as a contigency plan, if athlon sucked compared to p4 they could have just made it a cache heavy architecture that would be expensive to produce, but competitive)