I was wondering how much has AMD really come in these apps....NOw I have always speculated the quick fix design of the PD and PD EE was merely a band-aid and some of its inefficiences like still using the 800fsb and a shared memory bus were going to hamper it and lead to less increases in the dual core versus same single core....
I for one would have liked to see the so-called "reviewers" look into this. Merely by running a review with a Prescott 3.2e 1mb cache (540) and a FX51 or Clawhammer 3500+ for the 2.2ghz 1mb of L2 cache....
Then we could look at increases over single core and see who was more efficient...
Instead we wil have to lool at previous reviews prior to X2 and see what those chips above related to one another then.....
I reviewed Anandtech, techReport, Xbit, and Tomshardware to ry to get some numbers...now it was harder with Toms as they felt the need to put in their chart most of their A64 chips on Via boards and have not upgraded to NF3 and NF4 (superior platforms)
Divx (5.2 encoding)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------9% lead-----------now they are 4-7% behind
The PD EE version did worse then the non EE one showing the inefficiencies of HT and handling more then 2 threads. May be helped later on with software development I assume. Some apps do very well with 4 threads like rendering in 3dsmax, POVray SMPOV 3.6, Cinebench, etc....Other do not like most of the audio and video encoding...May be a reason why dual - dual core opteron setups may not be the best setup for this type of workstation activity at current...
Xvid (1.0-1.3 codecs)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------4-10% lead-----------now they are 10-12% behind
The 4-10% were differnces in reviews and apps used. The asad thing was the EE did worse in all of these apps again showing the inefficiencies with HT trying to handle 4 threads versus 2 threads.
Windows Media Encoder 9 ( I believe it was the HD)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------5%% lead-----------now they are 5-13% behind
The differences here were AT showed the PD EE do worse but TechReport had the EE do significantly etter then the non EE but still not better then the X2 (they ran it as what it truly was an OPteron 175)
Could ther have been other factors then just the trasformation to dual core??? yes...It is all possible SSE3 had a very small help in a few of those apps, but I reiterate very small if you look at winchester versus venice reviews....Also A64's have come aways from the FX51....
NOw in the end the leads have vanished as I had predicted (many also did) for weeks leading up to this event. These leads by AMD are very conservative now because they were tested on server class mainboards using slower ECC ram, slower timings, 2t, and overall slower chipsets meant for stability not high performance. Those leads will only get better....
So if we sum up the state of multimedia where it appears many of the apps are somewhat to very much adapted for SMT...AMD when they release will be faster then anything Intel has to offer and will be the king of pretty much all the benches. No more "if you encode this" and "if you game that" threads. I dont see any reason to promote an Intel system unless the person already had DDR2 and it may be a bunch of money saved to not swap out as many parts. Even then it will be tough cause to stay cheaper you would have to go with the even slower 2.8ghz model. Remember this is the 4400+ against their flagship dual core model annouced and AMD still has the 4800+ to be released at launch. The leads will only get bigger.
AMD will be the total solution since a 2.2-2.4ghz AMD even X2 is still a heavy performer in all gaming versus comparable priced INtel non dual core chips....
I for one would have liked to see the so-called "reviewers" look into this. Merely by running a review with a Prescott 3.2e 1mb cache (540) and a FX51 or Clawhammer 3500+ for the 2.2ghz 1mb of L2 cache....
Then we could look at increases over single core and see who was more efficient...
Instead we wil have to lool at previous reviews prior to X2 and see what those chips above related to one another then.....
I reviewed Anandtech, techReport, Xbit, and Tomshardware to ry to get some numbers...now it was harder with Toms as they felt the need to put in their chart most of their A64 chips on Via boards and have not upgraded to NF3 and NF4 (superior platforms)
Divx (5.2 encoding)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------9% lead-----------now they are 4-7% behind
The PD EE version did worse then the non EE one showing the inefficiencies of HT and handling more then 2 threads. May be helped later on with software development I assume. Some apps do very well with 4 threads like rendering in 3dsmax, POVray SMPOV 3.6, Cinebench, etc....Other do not like most of the audio and video encoding...May be a reason why dual - dual core opteron setups may not be the best setup for this type of workstation activity at current...
Xvid (1.0-1.3 codecs)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------4-10% lead-----------now they are 10-12% behind
The 4-10% were differnces in reviews and apps used. The asad thing was the EE did worse in all of these apps again showing the inefficiencies with HT trying to handle 4 threads versus 2 threads.
Windows Media Encoder 9 ( I believe it was the HD)
Intel P4 3.2e w/ HT previously had ------5%% lead-----------now they are 5-13% behind
The differences here were AT showed the PD EE do worse but TechReport had the EE do significantly etter then the non EE but still not better then the X2 (they ran it as what it truly was an OPteron 175)
Could ther have been other factors then just the trasformation to dual core??? yes...It is all possible SSE3 had a very small help in a few of those apps, but I reiterate very small if you look at winchester versus venice reviews....Also A64's have come aways from the FX51....
NOw in the end the leads have vanished as I had predicted (many also did) for weeks leading up to this event. These leads by AMD are very conservative now because they were tested on server class mainboards using slower ECC ram, slower timings, 2t, and overall slower chipsets meant for stability not high performance. Those leads will only get better....
So if we sum up the state of multimedia where it appears many of the apps are somewhat to very much adapted for SMT...AMD when they release will be faster then anything Intel has to offer and will be the king of pretty much all the benches. No more "if you encode this" and "if you game that" threads. I dont see any reason to promote an Intel system unless the person already had DDR2 and it may be a bunch of money saved to not swap out as many parts. Even then it will be tough cause to stay cheaper you would have to go with the even slower 2.8ghz model. Remember this is the 4400+ against their flagship dual core model annouced and AMD still has the 4800+ to be released at launch. The leads will only get bigger.
AMD will be the total solution since a 2.2-2.4ghz AMD even X2 is still a heavy performer in all gaming versus comparable priced INtel non dual core chips....
