- Mar 10, 2006
 
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Once I get my 3820 from Newegg (coming Wednesday) I will post some numbers with the retail stepping.
Awesome! Also if someone with a 3960X could chime in (AdamK47, perhaps?), then that'd be awesome.
Once I get my 3820 from Newegg (coming Wednesday) I will post some numbers with the retail stepping.
Anyone with inside scoop on the sb-e xeons shipping?
I so need a new macpro.
Once I get my 3820 from Newegg (coming Wednesday) I will post some numbers with the retail stepping.
March 6, 2012.
Is that the date apple will get them or is this the date macpros will be boxed and ready for my grubby little hands to subvert its clock cycles?
http://www.anandtech.com/show/2658/4I am pretty sue Nehalem was 100% a better processor than Penryn. That was a pretty BIG jump in performance at lower mhz even.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/2658/4
Some things prefer the fat cache offered by Penyrn. Not many, but enough to make it not unequivocally better. It was a big enough controversy to warrant its own article.
Consumers wanted Penyrn with an IMC. Enterprises wanted more scalability. Enterprises won.
Is that the date apple will get them or is this the date macpros will be boxed and ready for my grubby little hands to subvert its clock cycles?
I thought there were rumours that Apple might wait until IB-E to refresh Mac Pro? Maybe I have it backwards and that was something them skipping IB-E for Haswell-E.
I heard ib-e is another 13 months away at least. It would be nice to get sb-e and then skip ib and get a haswell macpro
sorry I need the xeon chips to be released. So not march 6th for sb-ep?
Yes, March for SNB-EP, but not sure if Apple will have models out that day that incorporate those chips.
Keep in mind these are stock tests (Read: Turbo On).My disagreement is with your logic here. Nehalem improved in SO many areas over Penryn. If you improve in 9 areas, and slide a little in the 10th, the overall product IS equivocally better. I have yet to really see a benchmark where Nehalem was slower per clock than Penryn in anything. I could be wrong though.
	
	Maybe the ring stops are still there?
Keep in mind these are stock tests (Read: Turbo On).
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http://www.realworldtech.com/page.cfm?ArticleID=RWT072811020122
Apparently SNB-E's LLC clock is ~1-1.5GHz? Doesn't that mean it's WAY slower than a consumer SNB chip?
We significantly under-estimated the ring bus and LLC frequency at 1-1.5GHz. It turns out that the cache and two 32B data rings in the system fabric run at core frequency providing up to 844GB/s of fabric bandwidth, which is amazing given the power constraints. This reduces the cache and memory latency and also simplifies the validation. More importantly, it is a huge improvement in bandwidth over Westmere-EP, where the LLC was implemented as a single partition. In that respect, the Sandy Bridge-EP cache is much more similar to the highly scalable Westmere-EX.
