pantsaregood
Senior member
- Feb 13, 2011
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Calling Sandy Bridge "three generations old" isn't really fair, either. Ivy Bridge was a die shrink - Intel called it a new generation, but the architecture was unchanged.
Nehalem/Westmere formed the first generation of the Core architecture.
Sandy Bridge/Ivy Bridge formed the second generation of the Core architecture.
Haswell/Broadwell form the third generation of the Core architecture.
Nehalem to Sandy Bridge yielded 10-15% higher performance per clock.
Sandy Bridge to Haswell yields 10-15% higher performance per clock.
It's not a huge leap, but it's there.
Nehalem/Westmere formed the first generation of the Core architecture.
Sandy Bridge/Ivy Bridge formed the second generation of the Core architecture.
Haswell/Broadwell form the third generation of the Core architecture.
Nehalem to Sandy Bridge yielded 10-15% higher performance per clock.
Sandy Bridge to Haswell yields 10-15% higher performance per clock.
It's not a huge leap, but it's there.
