which P4 does support Hyper Threading (if any)

EvilMan666

Junior Member
Sep 1, 2002
1
0
0
Hi!

I've just read on a german newssite (onlinekosten.de) that all P4 with 533 FSB should support Hyper Threading after a biosupdate. I can't believe this, is it true?

I thought that only the XEON P4 CPUs does Hyper Threading?

Please tell me the truth :)

Greetings, Ingo
 

BD231

Lifer
Feb 26, 2001
10,568
138
106
From what I've read, Hyper Threading is disabled "ON" the P4, so I dont think that bios update info is valid. Last I heard was that HT support will be enabled on the 3ghz and up part's.
 

MadRat

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
11,999
307
126
HT is only in Northwood, not in Williamette. All 533fsb ones will have it, but it won't be long before a patch is made for the 400fsb P4A's. Apparently there is a bug in the original P4A cores when it came to the HT design. It is fixed in the B- and C-steppings of the P4 cores.
 

lambasa

Member
Mar 30, 2002
60
0
0
Uhhh, sorry EvilMan. Hyper Threading is "built in" to Northwood, but it is disabled by a fusing option. There will be no BIOS updates or any other patches that will enable it. When Intel enables Hyper Threading, only the new P4's will have it. I believe when the 3GHz Northwood is released, Hyper Threading will be enabled. You will have to buy a new CPU if you want it.
 

ST4RCUTTER

Platinum Member
Feb 13, 2001
2,841
0
0
Like the others have said, Hyperthreading is built into the current Northwoods, but it won't be active until the Prescott makes its debut. The chips should also incorporate 1MB of on-die cache. I wouldn't be surprised if Intel includes other optimizations as well thanks to manufacturing capabilities that are (or should be) the envy of the industry.

Chip Architect

 

MadRat

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
11,999
307
126
Sounds like an awful lot of fancy specualtion. How successful was chip-architect.com at predicting past performance before it was released?
 

kgraeme

Diamond Member
Sep 5, 2000
3,536
0
0
There was recently a story at the Register about 3Ghz Northwoods being the first to have HyperThreading enabled, and the current i845g platform can't utilize HyperThreading whereas the i845e can. It lead to a bit of a thread here.