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Who is planning to get dual core CPUs as soon as its released?

no thanks, have had enough getting my hopes up for new hardware that either can't be found or costs two and a half times msrp. :roll:
 
I am!

Been holding off getting a new rig since summer in anticipation of dual cores. Really hope that they'll be worth the wait. I don't actually need them since I hardly do multi-tasking but if I do get them, would be great to write some programs that took advantage of it.
 
Originally posted by: deveraux
I am!

Been holding off getting a new rig since summer in anticipation of dual cores. Really hope that they'll be worth the wait. I don't actually need them since I hardly do multi-tasking but if I do get them, would be great to write some programs that took advantage of it.
I have read Intel wants to have 75% of their desktop market dual-core in a few years so you can rest assured there will be a slew of SMP aware proggies coming out to compliment AMD and Intc's offerings. Of course if you write some cool stuff I'd love a copy! 😀

 
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:
 
Originally posted by: ScrewFace
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:

Not entirely true I think. I mean yes, for current games, everything is single threaded. But then again, before the days of 3dfx's Voodoo, all games weren't 3D either. When you have the hardware for something, software tends to follow-up to make use of it.

Therefore, IMHO, games will follow suit with some form of "multi-threaded"-ness to take advantage of dual cores, albeit not immediately. Probably a year before mainstream games really start making use of it.

And about Intel not being able to get past 3.8GHz, well, I don't think that this is THE limit but remember that microprocessors can only be so small before internal errors (due to quantum effects) start building up to make a proc effectively unusable. I'm sure they'll get past 3.8GHz if they really wanted to, but there will be some sort of limit for this technology which is after all, quite old. The question really becomes, is the payoff worth the cost.

I mean, if dual-cores give you more returns for the amount of investment put into it, then why not go in that direction? I'm not saying that dual-cores are definitely the way to go, but if it produces the desired result of making a computer run smoother or apparently faster, why not?

I really doubt that it will be that difficult to write games for dual-cores, I mean, the only thing that is really required is that the game be written in several threads. It is conceivable (I have tried simple examples of this before, although not on a dual-cored system) that the AI be done in one CPU while the physics + graphics be done on the other CPU or some combination thereof. The problem would then be interprocess-communication and making it efficient so that the benefits of multi-threading do not outweigh the costs of the threads "talking" to each other (which it shouldn't be especially on a dual-core system).

My 0.02.

Originally posted by: DAPUNISHER
Originally posted by: deveraux
I am!

Been holding off getting a new rig since summer in anticipation of dual cores. Really hope that they'll be worth the wait. I don't actually need them since I hardly do multi-tasking but if I do get them, would be great to write some programs that took advantage of it.
I have read Intel wants to have 75% of their desktop market dual-core in a few years so you can rest assured there will be a slew of SMP aware proggies coming out to compliment AMD and Intc's offerings. Of course if you write some cool stuff I'd love a copy! 😀

Haha ..well, you're on! Although I have the suspicion that I will forget this by the time dual cores are out. 😛
 
Originally posted by: ScrewFace
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:


Even AMD has stated a single chip will be faster in games then a dual core cpu.

As for Intel fixing the P4. They need to make a new cpu from the ground up and they also need to throw out the idea that faster means better but they wont so they will keeping sucking for awhile.
 
Originally posted by: DragonFire
Originally posted by: ScrewFace
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:
Even AMD has stated a single chip will be faster in games then a dual core cpu.
Where did they say that???

They must've been talking about current games. If ANY application is coded for SMP, it'll definitely be faster in SMP. Gaming is no exception.

 
Originally posted by: ScrewFace
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:

Intel can get past 3.8GHz easily - in fact, the vast majority of E0 Prescotts are stable at over 4.0GHz. The problem is that it would require yet another motherboard revision, as the power consumption allowed is 120W, the 3.8GHz Prescott uses 119W and the power consumption scales with the clock speed.
 
why bother?
maybe in a year or 2 after its released there might be some actual supporting software.
remember their main objective is to sell you something even if you dont need it ~ you dont need it.

your system is fast enough, its your software that sux 😉
 
Originally posted by: Wingznut
Originally posted by: DragonFire
Originally posted by: ScrewFace
Dual cores are NOT for gaming. Intel can't get past the 3.8GHz mark so they're throwing worthless dual-cores on us. Those in the know won't be fooled. I can't beleieve with Intel's immense size and abilities they can't find a solution to the excessively hot-running Prescotts!
:roll:
Even AMD has stated a single chip will be faster in games then a dual core cpu.
Where did they say that???

They must've been talking about current games. If ANY application is coded for SMP, it'll definitely be faster in SMP. Gaming is no exception.

True, but the speed of AMD's dual core's is going to be slow compared to the singe core.
 
Originally posted by: deveraux

Not entirely true I think. I mean yes, for current games, everything is single threaded. But then again, before the days of 3dfx's Voodoo, all games weren't 3D either. When you have the hardware for something, software tends to follow-up to make use of it.

If this is true, why haven't software developers made program's that make USE of 64bit tech in the AMD64?
 
Originally posted by: MisterChief
Originally posted by: deveraux

Not entirely true I think. I mean yes, for current games, everything is single threaded. But then again, before the days of 3dfx's Voodoo, all games weren't 3D either. When you have the hardware for something, software tends to follow-up to make use of it.

If this is true, why haven't software developers made program's that make USE of 64bit tech in the AMD64?



Because you need a good retail 64bit OS and 64bit drivers from video card makers, etc...

 
its not that chips can only get so small before everything breaks down, but lithography. right now some things are only a few moecules wide. you can only go so much smaller. however, as lithography shrinks, chips tend to stay aroudn the same size, because more features are added.

also one good thing that intel's HT did was that it prepped the market for dual cores. so i think there will be more apps for dual cores than people think.

the 3.6 ghz P4 is at 115 watts. thats a LOT OF WATTS!!!!!!!! the 3.8 is higher. they could spend a billion dollars and get it down some how, but its not worth it.

writing code for multiple cores, doesnt necessarily mean writing it by hand, you could just recompile. you might want to do more though. i'm not exactly sure how this works.

dual cores is not just good for running different threads on different cores, you might want to run the same thread on different cores.

why do you think dual cores will be slow for games?
 
Originally posted by: DragonFire

As for Intel fixing the P4. They need to make a new cpu from the ground up and they also need to throw out the idea that faster means better but they wont so they will keeping sucking for awhile.



WHat!! Hehe and why would any selfrespecting gouger toss away the lie they have been pushing onto us for this many years? Im sure 99% of computer users still buy based on intel's formula: more mhz = more speed! Its the american v8

 
Longhorn is supposed to bring it all together, dual cores, AMD64, etc.

I doubt you'll see dual core outperforming single cores in games until the end of 05 at the earliest. 2006 is much more likely. Once software has been written and coded for SMP, we'll see much performance. 🙂
 
well, amd has 16% market share, so someone must have been convinced.

as far as longhorn. LOL!!!!! lets call it XP service pack 3.
 
I have a mobile AthlonXP @ 2500Mhz, and it does not feel nearly as snappy on the desktop as my old dual-500Mhz system did. I am all for dual cores if it brings back the snappiness I was so accustomed to. The question(s) of course is when and for how much. I like the dual Opteron approach in the meantime though, I would recommend dual processors to anyone who uses their computer often. I cannot comment on games, because I do not play them, but rest assured if dual-core shows a 1% increase in framerates I am confident that will be enough to convert the hard-core gamers out there. ;-)

Just my opinion,
ChunkyBarf
 
I will get probably a year after the introduction or when popular games take advantage of them

If I hold off, I'll have to wait too long . . ..
 
ill get it when prices drop. maybe a dual 3800+ system in a year...
really depends on how many games take advantage of it.
 
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