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AMD Thunderbird And Duron Set For June Launch

Chris Tom writes: "Mark Hachman has an article up on EBNS discussing the AMD Thunderbird and Duron. Topics include release date, die size, performance, and positioning against Intel's CPU offerings. The Thunderbird and Duron will both include on-die L2 cache. "

158 comments

  1. Justification for the cache geometry? by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

    Can anyone with inside information explain to me the reasoning behind the Duron's cache setup? It just seems that having an L2 cache smaller than the L1 cache wouldn't increase performance much over L1 with no L2 cache, while it does increase die size. Is there a reason why 64/64/64 was chosen over 64/64/0 or 32/32/128?

    1. Re:Justification for the cache geometry? by kaniff · · Score: 1

      Compared to the Celeron which has 128K of L2. But half of it is just the same stuff that's in L1. So basically its 64K of L1, and 64K of L2. The Duron has 128K of exclusive L1 cache, and 64K of exclusive L2. Almost like 192K of L1. Mmmm.

    2. Re:Justification for the cache geometry? by paitre · · Score: 3

      Keep in mind that the ondie L2 is -exclusive-, meanign that the data in it will -not- be the same data that is in the L1 (and possibly the L3).
      This increases performance because it gives almost the same performance as having 192K of L1.

      Pretty damn neat.

    3. Re:Justification for the cache geometry? by taniwha · · Score: 1
      I think there's a couple of things going here:
      • every little bit counts anyway
      • more associativity - think of L2 as being a way to extend the low associativity of L1
  2. Re:SMP Athlon by Sharks · · Score: 1

    That would kick ass. Too bad it is so expensive right now. Hopefully, if there is enough demand for it, Compaq would be able to drop the price on it.

  3. Re:Assembly by foolish+youngster · · Score: 1

    That's because he's writing the games in quickbasic

    --
    -- Defenestrate Microsoft!
  4. Re:Athlon will lead PIII: perhaps by X · · Score: 1

    Because mostly what it demonstrates is the benefit of the MicroQuill heap. ;-)

    --
    sigs are a waste of space
  5. Appropriate Parodies by Dungeon+Dweller · · Score: 1
    --
    Eh...
  6. Re:Production Yield by X · · Score: 2

    Dell's argument about the supply chain is laughable at this point. Over the past year we've had i820 delays, i820 bugs, i820 bugs again causing a recall, processor delays (although generally speaking not critical ones), and processor shortages from Intel. From AMD we've had... a lot of CPU's! ;-) Admittedly their Irongate Chipset has been far from ideal, but once you throw VIA into the mix, things look a lot better.

    Seriously, AMD's record over the past decade hasn't been great, but over the last year it appears to be much better than Intel's. If supply was really the issue I'd think at this point Dell would have taken the initiative and dabbled a bit with AMD (nobody says you have to commit your entire product line to AMD chips).

    --
    sigs are a waste of space
  7. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Your problem was you bought a gateway

  8. Re:Celerons Beware by kaniff · · Score: 1

    Not to mention they are selling the decrepit 66Mhz bus. Obviously to avoid competing with their own products. Hmph.

    Go AMD, Fight, Win.

    I don't think AMD is our savior from Intel, but they will at least light the fire under the microprocessor industry to get their asses in gear and get us the good stuff, instead of slowly dribbling out technology to keep us paying the big bucks for each new piddly advance.

    I want 1.5Ghz processors, with 256K of L1 cache, 512K of exclusive L2 cache, 200 Mhz DDR system buses, with stable chipsets, and I WANT THEM NOW.

    Hmph.

  9. Re:Price/Performance by kaniff · · Score: 1

    To keep the Celeron out of the P3's territory.

    Plain and simple.

  10. Re:Hmmm... by kaniff · · Score: 1

    It sickens me how many times this joke was made in this and the last Duron article threads.

    And yet, it's still funny. I laughed.

  11. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by LocalYokel · · Score: 1
    Oh, you mean like WinStar? Who the fuck are they?

    Their name implies that they have something to do with Windows (or a minivan), they use a logo image reminiscent of a Macintosh Meta key, and they had an ad that looked like a Dodge commercial... I'm not sure if any of those things are nearly as bad as the term they are so proud to have coined: "e.conomy"...

    --

    --

    --
    E2 IN2 IE?

  12. Re:Intel by kaniff · · Score: 1

    "Make the internet come alive."

    From an Intel commercial. How amusingly.. er, amusing.

  13. Re:Enough with the stupid funny posts already! by kaniff · · Score: 1

    Aw lay off. If we wanted serious, we'd go to Tom's or Ars. This is just too good an opportunity to poke fun.

    Heh, I said poke.

    *snicker*

  14. Re:Dell and AMD by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

    At that point AMD Mustang will be out

    What is this? Is that the real name of the chip? It sounds like AMD has some special relationship with Ford...

    -- Dr. Eldarion --
    It's not what it is, it's something else.

  15. Duron by Signal+11 · · Score: 4
    Personally, I think AMD is leaving out a critical piece of information - silicon is running out of time. Various experts agree that within a decade, silicon will reach the end of its usable lifespan - we can only go so small. This is why I think AMD has secretly started moving to Latex based CPUs. I mean, think about it - it's available at lower cost than silicon, and for wearable computers it is simply great. I mean, imagine how many gigabites per second this thing can achieve. What's even better, nobody will squabble about the die size of the newer latex-based CPUs - afterall, size matters. In addition, this may finally solve the issue of unsafe hex which has caused numerous virus outbreaks across the country - an estimated $10 billion in damage.

    AMD is keeping the wraps on this new processor for a reason, and I bet this is it.

    1. Re:Duron by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > AMD has secretly started moving to Latex based CPUs.

      Not a secret anymore. They announced their new "cling-on" processors at Cannes yesterday, and had some of Victoria's Secret's models wear them to cover their naughtybits on the catwalk.

      Rumor has it that VS has put those particular processors up for auction on ebay, and will give the procedes to a charity for geeks that can't get a date.

      --

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:Duron by Ranger+Rick · · Score: 1
      Not a secret anymore. They announced their new "cling-on" processors at Cannes yesterday, and had some of Victoria's Secret's models wear them to cover their naughtybits on the catwalk.

      I can't wait for the race to reduce die size. :)

      :wq!

      --

      WWJD? JWRTFM!!!

  16. Re:Duron/Thunderbird mobo/chipset support by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    Thanks for the insightful information! (^_^)

    At least now I know there will be Socket A motherboards available when the "Thunderbird" Athlon ships in June. I didn't want a repeat of last August when CPU's were easy to come by but motherboards were hard to come by.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  17. Amd Is pulling ahead but still not King. by SirStanley · · Score: 1

    IMHO, AMD is doing a remarkable job at keeping on top of Intel. Except for one thing. You (not that I know of anyways) Cant do SMP with Athlons. But you can with P3's and P2's etc... Right now Im running a Dual p3 550E System. And I do alot of computational junk (what i really mean is I do alot of compiling and MP3 Encoding at the same time) And Im willing to bet My System will make the Athlon 1ghz look like Eniac at those tasks. However Games would be really really sweet.
    Im not aware of how A 1ghz Athlon stands up to Intel based systems but Id be interested to see how they handle against SMP based machines (By the way the p3 550E set up cost me about 500 Dollars, A 1ghz Athlon is around 800 for hte chip... ANd I belive that price is a little low.)
    If anyone knows of anhthing that pertains to this chime on in.

    --
    --------========+++Dont Feed The Lab Techs+++========--------
  18. Duron? by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 1

    First, Intel with its bizarre names: Pentium. Celeron. Now AMD with Althon and Duron? What's next?

    The AMD Enduron? Or perhaps the AMD Marathlon?

    The Intel Vegetron?
    The Intel SafeSexium?

    The mind boggles.

    1. Re:Duron? by Sonicboom · · Score: 1

      After the Thunderbird, it's only logical that AMD will announce the "Ripple Chip"

      --
      [Connection closed by foreign host]
  19. Re:Dell and AMD by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    I'm sure that if the Allies could have bombed Germany with 'vettes they would have ;)

    (it would certainly _look_ neat)

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  20. Re:Where the hell do they get these names? by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 1

    "The Thetans are attacking! Quick, Dr. Org, activate the Elron(tm)* processors!"

    (Elron(TM) processors no longer available on E-Bay.)

  21. Re:Too bad about one detail... by barleyguy · · Score: 2

    Actually, it's quite the opposite. I pick what processor I want, and what price I want to pay for it, and then I wait for it to hit that price.

    I usually buy processors at around $150.00. It's a little high compared to the low end, but it's still high enough that I can feel close to the bleeding edge.

    --
    --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
  22. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by barleyguy · · Score: 1

    Speaking of Corel Office 2000, there are two HUGE patches on the internet that make it run very well. One is about 50 meg, the other one I think is 62 meg. It has some major bugs that are fixed with these patches.

    --
    --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
  23. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jpowers · · Score: 1
    I got those. Thanks to the big one, Quattro pro will now open, though not if you have Eudora open at the same time. Celeron 466, 128MB RAM. That app just doesn't play nice with others.

    -jpowers
    You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
    --

    -jpowers
  24. which department? by CMiYC · · Score: 1

    Okay...well...come over to engineering sometime and ask one of us if we think AMD is stable... You might be surprised (from your comment) about what you'll find out. We haven't had an quarterly meeting yet where someone has said lets talk about AMD.... and stability hasn't been the deterring factor for a while.

    ---

  25. Re: Duron - Durex by lbrlove · · Score: 1

    Intel will now say:

    "Only a real prick uses Duron"

    -L

  26. Re:Where the hell do they get these names? by Valur · · Score: 1

    Actually Elron is a pretty cool name. Reminds me of Elrond from Lord of the Rings.

    --
    Hosting for Creators: http://rpg-works.net
  27. Re:Specifics? by kaniff · · Score: 1

    Do you know someone manufacturing one of these?

    I could really use an ATA/66 transporter room controller card with 128MB of DDR Molecular Pattern Buffers. I'm planning on building a low-middle end intergalatic starship on a budget.

    Or do I need to buy a special motherboard?

    Blast.

  28. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by Signal+11 · · Score: 1

    I'll second that. I checked the specs and they say ATLEAST a 250w power supply. I bought a 300w and have had little difficulty with the GeForce card. Now, it DOES randomly crash sometimes, but I believe this is due to my overclocking the board - it is perfectly stable at it's "normal" 700 rating. So all this means is the card is running near or at its limit.. which I already knew.

  29. Competitive? by ViceClown · · Score: 1

    Will this really be competitive with Celeron and will the Durons be as finicky with memory as Athons???

    --
    Have a Happy.
    1. Re:Competitive? by Devil+Ducky · · Score: 1

      I wasn't aware of any memory problems with Athlons.

      I don't think there that many differences between the Duron and the Athlon, so I imagine that any problems you're having with an Athlon is still going to exist under a Duron.



      Devil Ducky

      --

      Devil Ducky
      MY peers would get out of jury duty.
    2. Re:Competitive? by MattXVI · · Score: 1
      I don't buy "the cheap crap". But that "cheap crap" works just fine on non-Athlon systems. Namebrand memory can be good or not so good. Most of the time you are not paying for quality, but rather a lifetime warranty.

      "When I'm singing a ballad and a pair of underwear lands on my head, I hate that. It really kills the mood."

      --
      When I'm singing a ballad and a pair of underwear lands on my head, I hate that. It really kills the mood.
      -Tom Jones
    3. Re:Competitive? by chowpalace · · Score: 1

      What with all the chip set makers making different chips and marketing them with different names (p3, celeron) running similar benchmarks, it reminds me of auto makers selling two versions of the same SUV i.e. Expedition & Navigator. Perhaps celerons now are geared to the working class with the other sets marketed for all others... ...Just a thought mind you...

    4. Re:Competitive? by michael.creasy · · Score: 1

      They should be, I would imagine them to be slightly faser than Celeron IIs and slighty cheaper.

      My Webcam

    5. Re:Competitive? by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      I read an article today that hints Intel may be dropping the Celery entirely later this year. It is at http://www.techextreme.com/hardware/cpu/metlon/ (too lazy to do a A /A)

      Anyway, I think the Duron is going to equal the current crop of flip chip pentium 3s clock for clock.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    6. Re:Competitive? by nd · · Score: 2

      Yes, it will be competitive with the Celeron. Even though it does have less Level 2 cache, the effective 200mhz bus will make all the difference in the world -- Not to mention the Athlon core which is still far superior to the PPro core of the Celeron. The Celeron 2's had relatively dissapointing performance, and it's likely that Duron will perform much better and cost less.

      As for the memory, not much will change probably. Duron's will be using basically the same chipset for Socket A (KZ133 and AMD 750). There are several places to buy "Athlon-tested" memory though, so I don't really see why this is a problem.

    7. Re:Competitive? by MattXVI · · Score: 1
      It's not really a problem so much as an increased sensitivity to memory quality. I'm not aware of any rigorous demonstration of this, it's just sort of a sense people are getting (myself included) who have worked with both systems. The benefits of AMD outweigh, though.

      "When I'm singing a ballad and a pair of underwear lands on my head, I hate that. It really kills the mood."

      --
      When I'm singing a ballad and a pair of underwear lands on my head, I hate that. It really kills the mood.
      -Tom Jones
  30. I hope these will work with SMP by michael.creasy · · Score: 1

    The Duron is likely to take over from the celeron, but it would be so much better if they worked in SMP. I know AMD is working on a SMP chipset, but I hope they don't do an Intel and only make later steppings SMP compliant.

    On another point the L2 cache on the Duron seems a little small and I'm concerned it will impact performance. It's not like AMD to make a mistake, but I guess we won't know until some benchmarks appear for the final silicon

    My Webcam

    1. Re:I hope these will work with SMP by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

      While multiple duron may be used (and this greatly increases reliability) I would not recommend it. It greatly reduces the experience of the end user.

      (g)


      -- Thrakkerzog

    2. Re:I hope these will work with SMP by Deflatamouse! · · Score: 1

      L2 doesn't really matter if you have a L1 just as big as celeron's L2.

  31. Re:memory problems? by havardi · · Score: 1

    Have we been under a false impression that Athlons need special memory? Many companies advertise athlon compatible memory; if this is a false issue I'm sure it's hurt AMD's sales.

  32. Re:Assembly by monkeyfamily · · Score: 1

    You can add the fact that his website is nonexistant! Guess what - it's not just down, it's a vailable for registration! He is SO a sham!

  33. AMD rocks by Sleen · · Score: 1

    AMD has shown consistent leadership recently. And continues to do so!
    hopefully they will keep up the good work...and maybe learn some lessons from transmeta?

    Anyhow, they have done a good job of keeping intel from dominating the market, which is good for everyone!

    -Sleen

    1. Re:AMD rocks by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

      People think they bought a Ford Mustang when they really bought a Dodge Neon.

      Aw, you should have said they thought they bought a Ford Thunderbird... keep it along the same lines as the article ;)

      -- Dr. Eldarion --
      It's not what it is, it's something else.

    2. Re:AMD rocks by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

      The Ford Mustang line works just a as well. Mustang is the codename for AMDs next core after thunderbird. Check http://www.aceshardware.com/ for details and rumors on, plus all the Mustang v Willameters guessing and flamage.

    3. Re:AMD rocks by abdera · · Score: 1

      >> and maybe learn some lessons from transmeta?

      Lesson 1: Don't actually produce a product. Vapor is much cheaper.

      Lesson 2: Hire Linus in some silly little position so that the Slashdot crowd crowns them King Of All Processor Manufaturers, despite lack of any supporting evidence.

      Or maybe they should just stick to producing the best i386 chips on the market at a reasonable price. -- Naah, that actually sounds like work.

      --
      This post is well thought out and accurate. Therefore, it cannot reflect the opinions of the SlashDot moderators.
    4. Re:AMD rocks by SnapperHead · · Score: 1

      AMD kicks ass. I have used them in every computer I have bought in the past 5 years. ( About 25 )

      But, I am a little conserned about the whole duron thing. I don't like to idea of a economy chip. My girlfriend ones a celeron 400, my AMD-300 kicks its ass up and down the block. Why ? Becuase celeron suck. I know they can be overclocked and everything.

      AMD has been busting there ass's for years to make a go name for them selfs. Know that there starting to kick Intel to the curb, there following in intels foot steps with bad ideas. Go into an newbie computer store. What do people think, celeron is good, cheap and a better. People think they bought a Ford Mustang when they really bought a Dodge Neon.

      I would prefear that AMD not release half assed chips. It tends to casuse to much confussion in new user land. Which ends up making my job harder! "I want a celeron", "no, you don't", "I want a celeron, I heard that they are really ...."

      --
      until (succeed) try { again(); }
    5. Re:AMD rocks by molog · · Score: 2
      People think they bought a Ford Mustang when they really bought a Dodge Neon.

      I can tell you from personal experiance that Dodge Neons really suck.
      Molog

      So Linus, what are we doing tonight?

      --
      So Linus, what are we going to do tonight?
      The same thing we do every night Tux. Try to take over the world!
  34. Easier way by Poligraf · · Score: 1

    I have 3 computers connected to one keyboars and monitor through the special switch (Belkin OmniCube 4-port, model F1D094). It is not inexpensive at about $180 plus cables, but I save on monitors, space and convenience.

    As for the older computers, they still can run SETI@HOME ;-)

    --
    Tigers respect lions, elephants and hippos. Maggots respect no one. (C) S. Dovlatov
  35. "Duron" - will this name stay? by pq · · Score: 1
    I hope to hell they rename it something else at launch: it sounds like a variant of Teflon, or maybe its the material from which they make Durex condoms....

    You'd think marketroids who get paid to come up with names would do better than this!

    --
    "I will take the Ring," he said, "though I do not know the way."
    1. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Fishstick · · Score: 1

      >Z80 - It sounds like an American muscle car

      Had a friend that actually pulled the emblems off his camaro and replaced them with something that looked similar to the Z28 logo with the red and chrome "Z" but it read Z80. Not everyone got the joke, tho.

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    2. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Elbereth · · Score: 1
      The stupidest names of all time:

      1. Athlon - The worst I've ever heard yet.
      2. Pentium - It almost sounds acceptible now, after nearly a decade.
      3. 80386SX - Intel should have called it the 80388.
      4. 80486SX - Intel was intentionally trying to piss me off and confuse the populace.
      5. Coppermine - There's no copper in it.
      6. Duron - It's not nearly as bad as "Athlon".
      7. Pentium II, Pentium III - Intel showing off their creativity here...


      The best names:

      1. Alpha - Finally! Someone has a marketing department that doesn't suck! Wait a minute, this is DEC...
      2. PowerPC - It has "power" right in the name. How cool is that?
      3. Celeron - It sounded a whole hell of a lot better than "Pentium" did when each was released.
      4. Z80 - It sounds like an American muscle car or an Italian sports car.
      5. Anything in the Amiga - They knew how to name processors. Too bad they didn't know how to sell computers.


      Spitfire was such a cool name. AMD is run by a bunch of fools, but the engineers they picked up from Nexgen and Digital are great.
    3. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Xrkun · · Score: 1

      You think that's bad! The company I work for is now Verizon Wireless. It looks like like the love child between Verisign and Amazon.com What an ugly baby ;-)

    4. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Tower · · Score: 1

      Itanium sounds a lot worse than Athlon to me... not that Merced was that much better - made me think of that monkey from 'Friends'...

      >2.PowerPC - It has "power" right in the name. How cool is that?

      Note that this was a derivative from the POWER processor, which, being an acronym, is pretty cool all in caps...

      >4.Z80 - It sounds like an American muscle car or an Italian sports car.

      Almost... too bad the Z28s are the 'woosy' Camaros... ;-)

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    5. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Tower · · Score: 1

      My dad works for Bell Atlantic.... we all thought it was some sort of Viagra derivative....

      old men with cell phones........

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    6. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by chowpalace · · Score: 1

      Duron is a name of industrial grade (read: CHEAP) paint sold at Home Depot and such, coincidence?

    7. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      Does it matter? All processor names sound stupid when they first annouce them, then after a while you get used to them. Perhaps it should be a subnote in Moore's Law.

    8. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay? by Deflatamouse! · · Score: 1

      "Celeron" stayed... and it sounded pretty stupid to me when I first heard it... :)

      What matters is performance/cost... names don't really matter.

  36. Production Yield by CMiYC · · Score: 2

    The article commented that AMD has supieror production yields.... which puzzles me. I know Dell (gee wonder why I know) is iffy about using AMD procs because of supply problems. It'd be nice to see AMD push stuff out the door so larger OEMs can begin to really consider them for servers and higher end markets. Even if their procs are faster,better, etc than Intel.... overall Intel can provide more quanitity to a company that demands high supply. If AMD is sitting around going "well, we're a little low" that'll drive the OEM's prices up (unexpectatly)...

    ---

    1. Re:Production Yield by Aos · · Score: 1

      AMD had a lot of trouble with yields earlier, in pre-Athlon era. For the last year or so, however, they have no trouble supplying their cpu's on time and in volume. Intel, on the other hand, was having problems supplying Coppermines recently. Just look at the availability of higher speed parts from both companies this winter/spring.
      DELL is the only big OEM company that isn't shipping Athlon systems. They almost did it once but then backed off. Rumors are that Intel was very "persuasive" in helping them back off.
      The only real problem with Athlon is chipset. Incompatibility problems are more frequent with Athlon motherboards then with ones based on Intel's own chipsets, although the situation is much better now then it was 6 months ago. Still, Intel has the edge there - and in SSE vs 3DNow! support -, although their own 820/840 is nothing but disaster. But with Thunderbirds/Durons, new chipset from AMD is coming so the situation might change.

    2. Re:Production Yield by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

      > DELL is the only big OEM company that isn't shipping Athlon systems. They almost did it once but then backed off. Rumors are that Intel was very "persuasive" in helping them back off.

      And perhaps only as a coincidence, Dell seems to be Microsoft's staunchest supporter among the OEMs as well. Texas was one of an original 25 states joining the DoJ in its suit, and rumor holds it that it was Dell that convinced Texas to drop out.

      --

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Production Yield by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

      Well this time last year AMD had productions problems, for the same reason Intel Coppermines have problems the processors core was being pushed to MHz levels the design couldn't handle. I think Dells main problem is AMDs size. With the Autstin Fab running flat out AMD can ship 6-6.5 million chips a quarter, say 20% of the market, Desden can current do a couple million probably 6 million by years end. So even if AMD processors are a quarter of the price and twice as fasters as Intels, the Box makers will still be shifting intel chips because they aren't enough AMDs chips to go round. Expect Athlons to go out in ugly boxes with no adverts to the clued up. While the less clever follow adverts and prettier but slower intel boxes until such time as Intel catches up, cuts prices, or AMD can deliever more chips.

    4. Re:Production Yield by LocalYokel · · Score: 2

      So true -- if Dell was afraid of the "lunatic fringe", they wouldn't be selling Linux boxen... ;)

      --

      --

      --
      E2 IN2 IE?

    5. Re:Production Yield by electricmonk · · Score: 1
      It'd be nice to see AMD push stuff out the door so larger OEMs can begin to really consider them for servers and higher end markets

      I thought that the reason no one is using AMD hardware in servers was because there were no MP motherboards that supported the Athlon.

      But I could be wrong...

      --
      Friends don't let friends use multiple inheritance.
    6. Re: Production Yield by kjeldar · · Score: 1

      Dell's argument is BS; the VIA KX133 Athlon chipsets are more than stable enough. The real reason for Dell's reluctance to use AMD products is left as an exercise for the reader. *grin*

      --

      J

    7. Re:Production Yield by RocketJeff · · Score: 2
      I know Dell (gee wonder why I know) is iffy about using AMD procs because of supply problems.

      I don't think Dell is worried about the supply of AMD chips - I think they're worried about their supply of Intel chips if they started using AMD chips too!
    8. Re:Production Yield by Rendus · · Score: 2

      Actually it's not availability, but rather "the lunatic fringe" as Michael Dell put it. Bah, whatever.

      The argument is the AMD chipsets aren't stable enough. But then we (I do tech support for Dell) use the 820 chipset, so...

  37. Re:Too bad about one detail... by paitre · · Score: 1

    There will -not- be slotA Durons.
    There -will- be slotA TBirds.

    *grin*

  38. Re:Celerons Beware by toofast · · Score: 2

    Well, with Athlon, you have a superior chip (than the P3) at a lesser price. What more can you ask?

    The Duron will be a major improvement over K6-2 though.

  39. Hmmm... by A.+Nutty · · Score: 2

    So what would a two-proccessor machine be? A Duron Duron?

    --
    I don't like fish. Reverse the fish to e-mail.
  40. Don't forget about the new... by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 2

    AMD Moron processor as well...

  41. AMD Image... by CMiYC · · Score: 1

    You know... it just occured to me... OEM vendors typically market their AMD systems has "lost cost alternatives." Why? Why not market an Athlon into a high end server market... Use AMD not because its cheaper but because its a faster, and a better value. I wonder if people tend to view the lower price of an AMD system to mean that its of lesser quaility....

    ---

    1. Re:AMD Image... by James+Hetfield · · Score: 1

      QLITech is a linux systems vendor that offers AMD Server systems.

      You can check them out at: http://www.qlitech.net


      "Then it comes to be,
      that the soothing light at the end of your tunnel,
      is just a frieght train coming your way..... "

      --


      "Fortune, Fame, Mirror Vain, Gone Insane..... But The Memory Remains...
  42. Re:Athlon will lead PIII by kevdog · · Score: 1

    AMD is not guilty of multiplier locking. You can adjust the multiplier on current Athlon's with the use of a Gold Fingers device.

  43. Re:memory problems? by pygat42 · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't think so, unless it's higher quality, and it may do just the opposite, boosting sales for those companies that make RAM, as there are those who will do anything to get an Athlon, and will therefore think they need new RAM, so they go out and buy the 'Athlon compatible' kind, which will be marked at a higher price, of course

    --
    Think --> Think Different --> Think OSS
  44. VIA-What happened? by Gimptek · · Score: 2

    What happened to VIA's Celeron competitor? I wanted to buy two of those and MP those things.

  45. Re:Specifics? by Steven+W0ston · · Score: 1

    How do you mean "it's a piece of shit" exactly?

    I don't know how I can get much clearer than that. Unless you're so stupid as to take it literally, and you really think the chip is made out of manure or something. Maybe you don't realize that "IT" means "DURON." I dunno.

    IT IS A PIECE OF SHIT.

    It is slow.
    It is difficult to write to.
    It isn't compatable with jack shit.
    It is inconsistant.

    Christ!

    If you want the technical details this isn't the time or the place. Despite what your self esteem might think, /. isn't exactly a technical forum. Go elsewhere if you really want me to tell you how this chip works. Doink.

    --
    Steven Woston Lead Programmer J-J-J-Julius Games http://www.jjjjulius.com
  46. Re:Quad Baby, Quad by spiro_killglance · · Score: 2

    Imagine a .....

  47. Re:Too bad about one detail... by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

    Well Abit KA7 and the Asus K7V are reported to work with all T-Birds. I believe only the deasden copper based T-Birds will have a problems with KX133 motherbirds. Besides KX266 and/or 760, with DDR and ATA-100 will be great reasons to change your motherboard too.

  48. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jayhawk88 · · Score: 1

    I tell you what, though: I've dealt with a lot of computer manufacturers, and IMHO, Dell's support easily blows away everyone else. Granted, they are probably on average the most expensive of the Big Name companies, but I'll gladly spend a little more on the front end if it get's me superior service down the road.

    Still, I wouldn't mind seeing some AMD's in Dell systems, and I don't see why it hasn't happened yet. I don't think Intel's in any position to say to Dell, "Stick with our chips or we'll pull them all" like they used to back in the day.

  49. wha? Thunderbird? by DrEldarion · · Score: 2

    I can see the future news releases now...

    Today Intel, in response to the strategic alliance of AMD and Ford, is planning to team up with Chevrolet.

    Intel's plans for the future include a chip named the Intel Camaro, which is going to be a direct competitor to the AMD Mustang.


    -- Dr. Eldarion --
    It's not what it is, it's something else.

  50. What's in a name? by WombatControl · · Score: 3

    Duron is kinda interesting... sounds vaguely like a Klingon name... "Duron will destroy its enemies on the field of silicon battle and drink their blood! Qapla'!"

    Then again, that's not the worst naming gaffe that could be made. I will *never* forgive Intel for not naming the Pentium II the Sexium. Even worse is them not then calling the Pentium III the Septium. That way if something went wrong in the manufacturing process it could have been the Deviated Septium. *rimshot*

    In all seriousness, the Duron should have enough of a price/performance ration to seriously give Intel some competition. The next computer I plan to be will be a Duron box, and I suspect I'm not alone on that one.

  51. Dell and AMD by SpinyNorman · · Score: 5

    Of the top 10 PC manufacturs, 9 use AMD parts (incl. Compaq, Gateway, IBM, HP...), with Dell being the only hold out.

    Guaranteed volume may be a factor of why Dell hasn't yet adopted AMD parts, but another major reason is that it would jeapordize Dell's special relationship with Intel.

    Still, performace and price are likely to force Dell to use AMD processors this year in order to remain competetive. Thunderbird is likely to be around 10% faster than PIII at the same clock speed, but will in fact also be available at much higher clock speeds than PIII.

    Ignoring Dell's limited edition 1GHz PIII made possible by their Intel relationship (1GHz PIII won't be in volume production until Q4), the fastest PIII currently available is the 866MHz.

    1GHz Thunderbird vs 866MHz PIII is a big performance gain for Dell to expect it's customers to give up. The latest Computer Shopper is even advertizing the as yet unannounced 1.1GHz Thunderbird, which may be a surprise announcent at the launch on June 5th.

    Intel are not going to be able to match Thunderbird clock speed or performance until Willamette is launched towards the end of this year. At that point AMD Mustang will be out, and may well again be the faster processor (no benchmarks for either Willamette or Mustang are available, but AMD technology roadmap indicate they are about a year ahead of Intel in the move to .13 micron process technology - Mustang may well be a ".15" .18/.13 micron process hybrid).

    1. Re:Dell and AMD by Anonymous+Elf · · Score: 1

      What a funny little post! I'm must admit, you almost got me to laugh out loud - but it did make me smile. Bravo.

    2. Re:Dell and AMD by dufke · · Score: 1

      Nope, rather they are codenaming their processors after WWII fighters. Thunderbird, Spitfire, Mustang etc.

      (A rather strange irony... they are naming stuff after Allied air power, and making it in Dresden.)

      I guess they ran out for K8 though... I never heard of a WWII fighter named 'Sledgehammer'...


      -

      --
      __
      Comment submitted. There will be a delay before you understand what you posted.
    3. Re:Dell and AMD by Epi-man · · Score: 1

      but AMD technology roadmap indicate they are about a year ahead of Intel in the move to .13 micron process technology - Mustang may well be a ".15" .18/.13 micron process hybrid).

      Actually, 0.15 um is a process in and of itself. I remember there used to be a spot for it in the SIA (Semiconductor Industry Association) roadmap a few years back. Actually, what we usually see is the generations merge as you continue to shrink your critical dimensions, improving performance yields within "a generation."

  52. Specifics? by timothy · · Score: 1

    How do you mean "it's a piece of shit" exactly?

    I thought this was basically a repackaged Athlon with a bit less onboard cache.

    I don't generally hear the Athlon described as a P.o.S., so I'm curious why Duron would be so much worse than say, a Celeron.

    The name sucks, but other that that all other reports have made this sound like a contender for the low / low-middle / middle-middle market. And since I am actively thinking about a machine that can actually play games ;) but don't need a dual gighertz athlon with transporter room, I'd like to hear more details before writing off these new AMDs. I've been pleased as punch with my salvaged AMD K6, and would like to keep supporting non-Intel chips unless driven otherwise by good reasons.

    Any insight?

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
  53. Re:Assembly by Shadowlion · · Score: 1

    Considering that:

    a) I've never heard of you,
    b) I've never heard of your company,
    c) I've never heard of any of your games,
    d) You offer no qualifying information on why you consider the chip to be "a piece of shit,"
    e) You offer no information on what you were trying to do with the chip, aside from the cryptic "Assembly" as the subject for your post, and
    f) You offer no evidence that you are qualified to speak on the issue, aside from merely being "lead programmer" (whatever that means),

    nothing you say will establish experience or credibility for you to speak on this issue. As a result, your opinions as expressed in your post are meaningless, and you appear to be using your title as "lead programmer" in a classic case of False Authority Syndrome.

    If you would like anybody for you to take you seriously, please provide pertinent information, observations, and data about your experiences with the chip.

  54. Re:Celerons Beware by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

    Celeron may be Similar to Pentium III at 466 and 533, but the slower 66 bus kills at faster MHz, Clock multipliers above 8 start to suck badly especial with a small cache. Duron stays on a 200MHz (100 DDR) bus and will slay celeron above 600. Expect Intel to push forward the celeron 100s quickly. In fact Intel with stupid not to but all the new coppermine celerons on 100 to begin with. It would be faster and wouldn't cost them a penny.

  55. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jpowers · · Score: 1
    So far I've dealt with support from Dell, IBM, Compaq, Gateway, and Micron. The IBM guys are fucking geniuses with their product, though the hold times are occasionally long. At the other end of the spectrum, Gateway's people always seem on the virge of blurting "you want fries with that?", though I suspect this has something to do with the way Gateway tracks their equipment ("You can't get sound? What kind of card do you have?").

    Dell and Compaq were about the same, very professional. Micron's weird: not as sharp as IBM (no one is), but if they can't tell you how to fix it within about 10 minutes, they send a new one. I've gotten motherboards, RAM, monitors, even whole PCs replaced like next day without even asking.

    -jpowers
    You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
    --

    -jpowers
  56. Re:Where the hell do they get these names? by Glytch · · Score: 1

    Nah, just the result of bad puppet work. I couldn't get enough of the show as a kid, though. Oh well.

    THUNDERBIRDS... ARE... GO!

  57. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jpowers · · Score: 1
    Good point. I hadn't thought of that. When I hear "special relationship," I think post-WWII Iandoli's supermarkets here in MA: they had an inside deal with ADM or something and they "passed the savings on to you."

    The high-end chip angle makes sense seeing how they've always maintained their reputation by buying at the top of the market. Still, the other day one of the statisticians asks for a new laptop and it's $1000 more than the best Thinkpads, which I like better anyway. I can see it if you're Fortune 500 or something, but we're non-profit and that just looks bad on paper.

    -jpowers
    You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
    --

    -jpowers
  58. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jpowers · · Score: 1
    I'm sure if anyone implied that their special relationship benefits the customer. You're right, of course, I jumped to conclusions. I'm still suffering from sticker shock. I hope their advertising barrage goes very well.

    Personally, I could care less what kind of chip the machine runs if it's just a desktop. My users run the sort-of-finicky Corel Office 2000 app, and whoever makes a computer that can run it without crashing wins our vote.

    Honestly, though, I don't think HAL could run it.

    -jpowers
    You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
    --

    -jpowers
  59. Re:Celerons Beware by Tony_Cross · · Score: 1

    Well, ya got me there. Im just spectating. Oh well...you know what they say about how one shouldn't assume. :)


    --------------------------------------------

    --


    --------------------------------------------

    "
  60. Re:Thunderbird? by kawlyn · · Score: 1

    the Intel 128 bit Unobtainium.

    --

    When someone yells "Stop" or goes limp, or taps out, the fight is over.
  61. AMD's abandonment of Slot A by kjeldar · · Score: 1
    The institutions which recently did mass upgrades to Slot-A boards will have serious trust problems with AMD in the future.

    AMD: "Hey, we've got this great Athlon chip. It's better than a P3! You need this Slot-A motherboard to run it."
    Corp: "Okay, if it's so great, we'll take 1,000. You'll continue to support this Slot-A platform, won't you?"
    AMD: "Of course!"

    This happens more often than you think; there are tons of companies that upgraded to next-gen K6en instead of next-gen Pentia, for the simple reason that they could. The Pentia required motherboard upgrades, the K6en didn't. Any corp faced with this choice will go with the upgrade that gives comparable results and is roughly half the cost, and rightly so. Based on the positive experience they had with Socket 7, a lot of corps then went to Slot-A when upgrade time rolled around, assuming it'd continue to be AMD's platform of choice.
    Not so.

    If VIA/Cyrix are smart, they'll slap together a Slot-A processor to fill this gap.

    --

    J

  62. Duron ?= Boron by redragon · · Score: 1
    I knew this dog when I was a kid. It would eat the little extra chunks of cement that is leftover after cement has been poured.

    Well...imagine hitting that sorta dog-pooh with your lawn mower. Took out my mom's Volvo Wagon window once. She was PIS*ED...

    Sooo...my dad and I named the dog Boron...

    Sorry for the off-topic...
    Casey

    --
    - Sighuh?
  63. Re:Athlon will lead PIII by Anonymous+Elf · · Score: 1

    What I would have liked to see is procs released like the Pentium Pro - no multiplier lock and no set bus frequency. You should be able to take a PIII from 100 MHz to 133 MHz without overclocking. Intel & AMD can sell their procs at a rated speed and make this info easily identifiable.

    Perhaps I shouldn't whine too much. After all, the shitty state of affairs is why I still run pentium pros.

  64. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by talesout · · Score: 1

    Your problem wasn't from the hardware, it was from the manufacturer. I worked for Gateway for 2 years in the Service department and can tell you one thing DON'T BUY GATEWAY. Especially if you are a power user.

    I bought a Gateway as an employee and when I recieved it it instantly stopped working. I fiddled around and booted the hard drive in another machine and it turned out that they had loaded the wrong video driver for the card that I had and that video driver had somehow actually screwed up the original video card. This is my personal Gateway horror story and I can't tell you the number of screw ups I saw come through when I worked there.

    If you want a computer pre-built, go somewhere else. Gateway was always low quality, and in the time I was there I could actually tell that the quality was getting worse. I'm sure I will get flak for this if Gateway sees it, but what are they going to do, fire me?!? I quit there because of the mindset that Gateway is the one true way, and that Ted was GOD (the original founder). What a joke. And we laughed just as hard inside the company as people outside the company laugh, believe me.

    BTW, I quit there almost three years ago now, so this isn't just a quick "I'm going to get those bastards" type of post. Once I got out and started to see how real computer companies do things (Dell, Micron, Compaq, HP, ....) I realized that it was worse than I had thought. Just stay away from Gateway. Judge the Athlon on its own merits, not on Gateway's shoddy work.

    --


    Bite my yammer.
  65. Athlon will lead PIII by Wreck · · Score: 3
    Anyone recall a year ago when the Athlon first came out? The benchmarks then all had athlon handily beating the PIIIs at the then-current top speeds of 600-650. And it was not small, particular: anywhere from 10 to 25% faster. The two processors both had 512K of L2 cache, not on-die so running at half of the CPU speed.

    Then Intel went to coppermine: 256K of L2 cache running full speed. This yielded about a 10% speedup: for instance see Tom's comparison here.

    Meanwhile, though faster Athlons were released (at 700, 750 MHz), they had no faster L2 cache: they had to run at 40% or 33% of the core speed. The result? Coppermine beats Athlon, narrowly. You can see it happening in this graph, if you imagine the blue line extending about straight (which is more-or-less what happened.) The two chips are quite comparable at the lower end, or maybe Athlon wins. But in the 1G processors, PIII is the winner (see this, for instance).

    Now with Thunderbird, Athlon will again be more or less the same in L2 cache as PIII: 256K full speed on-die cache. So, we should expect the Thunderbird to kick PIII's butt, by about 10% or so plus the fact that it will actually be available.

    Duron should also beat celeron, though perhaps by a smaller margin.

    1. Re:Athlon will lead PIII by Anonymous+Elf · · Score: 1

      Why would Duron beat Celeron by a smaller margin? Rumor had it, AMD was concerned about releasing Duron before Thunderbird because Duron is expected to be on par with Athlon's at the same speed - possibly even better.

      The 700 MHz celeron's can fry as far as I'm concerned. Although both Intel and AMD are guilty of multiplier locking and fixing the user to a bus speed, only Intel seems to use the lock to peddle ancient technology (66 MHz bus) to enforce product segmentation. Pathetic.

    2. Re:Athlon will lead PIII by Admiral+Llama · · Score: 1

      Actually, the funny comparisons weren't the Athlon versus the P2s and P3s, but rather the Xeons. One also has to chortle heartedly at the fact that AMD was also beating Intel in the benchmarks that Intel made up just to show the "superiority" of the Intel chips.

    3. Re:Athlon will lead PIII by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pissboy shitfucker, it is locked when you buy it. You can modify it (violating your warranty) to override the locking circuitry. but an Athlon is by nature locked. You're a colossal fuck-stick for arguing this. No go back to your hole with your ugly hag mother and shut the fuck up.

  66. Re:Celerons Beware by um...+Lucas · · Score: 1

    For one, how can you have an opinion of the performance of the Duron chip, being that it's not yet availabe and you don't have an @amd.com in your email address? :)

    The difference between Celerons and Pentium III's at the same speed is minimal, unless you work with data that's too large for the Celeron's cache but small enough to fit into the Pentium III's... That's probably a very small subset of the population... It's either small enough, or it isn't. If you're working with word documents, it will probably fit. If you're editing graphics or video, or if you're writing large programs, it probably won't.

    The reason that Celeron's at this point appear inferior to P-III's is simply that Intel refuses to let Celeron's be released at speeds that might compete with the Pentium family. The moment that Duron chips march into the Celeron's market, watch as Intel hurriedly rushes faster and faster chips out the door. Not saying that my fingers aren't crossed for the Duron to be successful. I just think it's inappropriate to make presumptions on non-shipping products based on information that the manufacturer supplies (and that holds true for everyone, Intel, Apple, Microsoft, Transemeta, etc...)

  67. Re:Price/Performance by Mayor+Quimby · · Score: 1

    Its bus is a huge advantage over the crippled 66MHz Celerons.

    And, according to VIA and Micron, DDR SDRAM and chipsets should be coming on line soon, which will take full advantage of the bus.

  68. Hopefully it will be more stable by neowintermute · · Score: 1

    I imagine they're pushing this duron out so quickly because it's a bug fix. Hopefully it's been tested more thoroughly than the athlon.

    My girlfriend bought a gateway with an athlon and a geforce and it was a nightmare.

    First of all, they install some freaky harddrive history software incase you have a problem, so that you can restore your harddrive to it's state from a previous date. That crap prevented partition magic from working right, so I couldn't install linux without reformatting.

    Then the real problems started. (After removing that history crap) After working for about an hour, it started crashing randomly. Mind you, this is the night we recieved it. Then all of the sudden, at boot time, when the gefore displayed it's memory count from it's bios, there were little white artifacts all around the text. And now there were little dots all over the screen at boot time and in windows. Then it would crash any time you logged into windows. So it was totally unusable.

    Then, since it crashed when you logged into windows, we left it at the windows login screen and went out to eat. When w came back, the screen was covered with moving vertical red and black lines. When you moved the mouse there was a big yellow block where the cursor should have been. That's when we sent it back. Mybe there was some kind of freaky driver problem, but it sounds there was some serious instability in either the geforce or the athlon. I had read that there were problems with that pair, but I figured that if gateway would sell it to us, it must have been sorted out. What a mistake that was. So, I hope the duron is tested better. It sure has a cool name.

    ___________________________
    Michael Cardenas
    http://www.fiu.edu/~mcarde02
    http://www.deneba.com/linux

    1. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by starman97 · · Score: 1

      Lessee...

      . Partition Magic and funky partitioning done by Gateway... And the K7 is to blame? Dont think so...

      . Windows , come on, you're running THE most unreliable PC operating system and you blame the CPU?

      . Gateway - Like these guys are known for building good PCs? I think not.

      . GeForce - This card pulls so much power from the AGP slot, Only the very top grade PC motherboards are built with strong enough on-board regulators to run this card. Nothing to do with the K7 again...

      Here's a tip:
      Dont take a hardware job , troubleshooting's not your best ability.. :)

      --
      Starman97@Gmail.com (bring it on spammers)
    2. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by Tower · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've been more dissapointed the past couple of years with the way Gateway has gone... When I got my Cow(P-100) in '95, they setup a partition scheme custom for me, and when they shipped a replacement drive for a lightning strike (got it less than 18 hours after the tech support call!), it was set up the way I previously had it (aside from the extra gig of space I got)... I was very happy. Not only that, but my case and parts made things very expandable. The only problem was that the motherboard was designed to be secured quite a bit more firmly than most other AT boards, and the case had a number of standoffs that were in fairly non-standard places, so many other boards wouldn't fit in there. I was very happy with that box, and it lasted me quite a while (it got upgraded so much - everything but the MB/Proc), and then I sold it to a friend, who uses it as his linux box to this day. Very nice.

      Another friend got a P-200 Cow box, and had numerous troubles with it, but the PII-450 Cow seems even more problematic from the install/driver standpoint... I haven't seen their Athlons (except at the store), so I can't say firsthand how those are... It seems, like many things, the more mass-market they've gotten, the less easily things get for power-users.... Oh well, I'll remmeber the golden days of the Cow fondly (486/earlyP days)...

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    3. Re:Hopefully it will be more stable by lweinmunson · · Score: 1

      Problems with Athlons and early GeForce cards are pretty well documented. The GeForce cards drew so much power that they could not be use reliably with out at least a 300w power supply. That sounds about like what you had happen to you. Once they Athlons moved to the new process (k75 I think) and the VIA chipset came out these problems pretty much went away.

  69. If AMD and Gerry Anderson got together... by jd · · Score: 3
    Window's new startup sound: "Anything can happen in the next 30 minutes!"

    AMD's Beofulf startup script: 5.... 4.... 3.... 2.... 1.... *sound of rocket taking off* Thunderbirds are go!

    AMD's next chips (the Stingray series) will cause office buildings to retract into the ground, whenever you run a difficult program.

    Reports that using the AMD Thunderbird causes you to walk in a strange, stiff-legged manner are denied, as are rumours that Brain has bought out Red Hat.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:If AMD and Gerry Anderson got together... by zorgon · · Score: 2
      kill ... Straker. Kill ... Straker! Kill Straker!! ;)

      And now, some text to evade the lameness filter. Bla, bla. Linux rules, Micro$oft s*cks, beowulf, smp, boy howdy I really love those chips with the funny names.

      --

      I am quite civilized, and I should be brought a beer immediately. -- Bruce Sterling

  70. Re:hey dumbass by Anonymous+Elf · · Score: 1

    I got to agree with AC. This is the second "Duron" story where half the comments are "funny" and I have dig thru the lamest jokes to find real information.

    Serves me right, because apparently, nobody has anything of value to add. Off to tom's hardware...

  71. Any chance you can get them to stop running.. by subtraho · · Score: 1

    Those ad with that annoying "people wanna be free" song? Probably not, huh? Ah, well.. It's gotten so bothersome that I now purposefully hit "mute" whenever a verizon wireless commercial comes on. And always running two in a row doubles the fun!

    --
    -subtraho
  72. Athlon sounds more like a........ by Trollok · · Score: 1

    running shoe or some kinds of sportswear. "Hey, those Athlons your wearing look pretty sharp." - - -

    --
    Me a troll, me no gnome, me smash ye head and break ye bones.
  73. Re:Celerons Beware by billybob+jr · · Score: 2

    Nothing I've seen indicates that newer celerons and newer P3s perform the same for a given clock speed. This used to be the case. For example, I have a celeron 300a overclocked to 450. The performance is similar to P2 450 and a P3 450 (the older flavor of P3 that had 512k off-die cache) for most applications.

    The newer P3s have 256k on-die cache that makes the chip much faster than the old P3s. The newer celerons are the same, but with half of the L2 cache disabled. The benchmarks I've seen have shown the new celeron lagging considerably behind a new P3 with the same clock. I think the days of celerons offering the same performance as a P3 are over.

    Two notes: I'm basing this on my memory of reviews. If someone knows better please correct me (I know, I know, it's tough to find people willing to at Slashdot). Also I wonder if the celerons aren't slower than the P3s because the L2 cache's bandwidth is halved. I'm no expert, but memory systems can use interleaving similar to RAID striping on hard drives. Maybe when Intel chopped the L2 cache in half (really just a crippled coppermine P3) they halved bandwidth too.

  74. Re:Too bad about one detail... by Admiral+Llama · · Score: 1

    While you have a fair point, when was the last time you upgraded just the processor and not the motherboard? Even if you go with the same chipset board, there's still probably a compelling reason to use a more recent board such as the advancements between BX boards today versus when they first came out. Then again, the BX chipset is more of the exception given its unusualy long life span.

    One might argue that not upgrading the board is healthy cost savings, but if you're upgrading a processor within a sufficiently short timespan as to not necessitate a new board technology, then money obviously isn't an issue.

  75. Score 0/-1 comments don't get deleted in archives. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    They just don't show up by default for non-logged in users. Log in and set your prefs to show archived articles at -1. Or just load, edit the popup menu and reload.

    Note to rob: Don't all these reloads from the threshold not being right bog down the server unnecessarily?

  76. Thunderbird? by Eric+Gibson · · Score: 1

    When did AMD start making good old fashioned gypsy wine? ::slurp:: *hiccup* I gonna gimme somma dat, hippie wine. ::bumps into desk::

  77. This just in. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > They announced their new "cling-on" processors at Cannes yesterday

    Intel countered today with the announcement of their new Strapon processor, saying that they expected it to put them back on top in no time.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  78. Re:Intel by abdera · · Score: 1
    Yaeh really "unlock the power of the internet."

    Woo-Hoo

    --
    This post is well thought out and accurate. Therefore, it cannot reflect the opinions of the SlashDot moderators.
  79. Re:Too bad about one detail... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
    There will -not- be slotA Durons.
    There -will- be slotA TBirds.

    Yep, and ebay is a great place to sell my kx133 slotA mobo.

    --
    "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
    --Tom Schulman
  80. Better than ADMROCKS by craw · · Score: 1

    Whoa, hey stop that!:-) When I first saw your subject line I thought that it read, ADMROCKS. If you follow linux security news you would know what that means. You've been cracked!

  81. Re:YALTtSIoS. by monkeyfamily · · Score: 1

    I think you didn't get it. See comment on other occurances of the name "Duron"

  82. Re:SMP is coming, but not just yet by ErikSev · · Score: 1

    AFAIK The AMD 760 northbridge will be the first to support dual processors, and will support two (though it is possible use more than one northbridge for up to 8 processors). It will be sweet when it comes out, as the athlon does not need to share system bus resources, and thus a pair of 750 MHz chips should equal 1500 MHz, as opposed to about ~1200 MHz on Intel chips.

  83. Too bad about one detail... by c=sixty4 · · Score: 2
    It's just too bad that these processors will be made available in a socket interface instead of the slot interface all current Athlon motherboards are available as. It makes upgrading a bit more expensive, as a new motherboard is needed. Apparently, it's also not feasible to make "slotket" converters for the Athon / Duron / Thunderbird / Mustang / K7 / Whatever.

    "You can bypass the click-though licence agreement on Microsoft's PAC specification by opening the file with WinZip instead of running the file". There. Have you violated the DMCA today?

    --
    "The good die first." "Most of us are morally ambiguous, which explains our random dying patterns." --- MST3K
    1. Re:Too bad about one detail... by jpowers · · Score: 1
      Glad to see my old .sig lives on.

      -jpowers
      You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
      --

      -jpowers
    2. Re:Too bad about one detail... by jpowers · · Score: 1
      ...though I got stuck on a bunch of constitutional advocacy/right-wing militia SPAM lists for it...

      -jpowers
      You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
      --

      -jpowers
    3. Re:Too bad about one detail... by c=sixty4 · · Score: 1

      Just making an errata to my previous post here - there will be Slot A Durons / Thunderbirds made, but they will only be shipped to OEMs, which doesn't improve the situation for upgraders.

      --
      "The good die first." "Most of us are morally ambiguous, which explains our random dying patterns." --- MST3K
    4. Re:Too bad about one detail... by taniwha · · Score: 1

      actually if you're not going to have cartridges with built-in cache then the slot1/slotA stuff doesn't make much sense cost wise or signal integrity-wise - I just wish I could buy all those dual-cpu socket370 (or Athlon) motherboards I so desperately need

    5. Re:Too bad about one detail... by barleyguy · · Score: 2

      One might argue that not upgrading the board is healthy cost savings, but if you're upgrading a processor within a sufficiently short timespan as to not necessitate a new board technology, then money obviously isn't an issue.

      When you are upgrading often, money is MORE of an issue, because your annual cost can go way up by having to buy more parts. I actually have a socket 7 motherboard that is on its third processor. It's a FIC PA-2007, that I've had since 1997. They have bios patches to run anything up to a K6-III on it, as well as large hard drives.

      I have respect for a company when they still provide updates and support for legacy products, and allow upgrades for a long period of time. I'm hoping Socket A will stick around for a while, because I hate buying motherboards unnecessarily.

      --
      --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
  84. SMP is coming, but not just yet by MSG · · Score: 5

    Some people are asking about SMP, and since I recently attended an AMD partners conference, I thought that I would share.

    First, the Duron and Thunderbird processors are going to integrate the L2 into the die. The AMD techs seemed excited about that since the Athlon is already outperforming the Coppermine. The move from the L2 on the module to L2 on the die should prove a massive boon to their already good performance. This also means that there is no longer a reason to use a slot. (With .25 micron process, you can't put the L2 on die, it'll produce too much heat. However, you can't access the L2 cache very quickly through a socket, there's too much resistance.) The Duron will use the new Socket A, and the Thunderbird will be available in both Socket A and Slot A configurations, so that all of the old motherboards aren't immediately obsoleted. Later processors will only be available in Socket A.

    Second, SMP is coming, but not in the Duron or Thunderbird. Mustang will bring us SMP later this year, in Socket A configuration. The point that AMD stressed is that Intel processors use a shared bus to the North Bridge, whereas their Athlons will each have their own bus to the North Bridge. This will provide the processors a whole lot more bandwidth to their memory and peripherals.

    1. Re:SMP is coming, but not just yet by MSG · · Score: 1

      Oh, I forgot that AMD's techs also told us about their new fab in Dresden, which will manufacture the Athlons (Mustang) using their copper process.

  85. Re:"Duron" - will this name stay?Offtopic by DoofusRufus · · Score: 1

    Ford-Chevy......Makita-DeWalt......PC-Mac.......Ma kes me think of a bunch o' folks never got over having their mama's tit taken away from them. Just use the tools and get to work.:>)

    --

    'Looking back to a better day, feeling old and in the way.' -David Grisma

  86. SMP? by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    So any word on SMP, then? That's what I'm really holding out for.

    --Joe
    --
  87. SMP Athlon by edhall · · Score: 2

    Theoretically, a dual Athlon MB could be made using the Tsunami chipset (Compaq's blindingly fast dual-processor chipset for the Alpha). Unfortunately, the chipset would then cost more than the two Athlons (about $1000), so I don't see this happening soon.

    -Ed
  88. Finicky with memory? Since when? by GreyFauk · · Score: 1

    Am I out of the loop or something?
    Never had a single problem with all the athalons
    I've built so far... standard generic ram to boot.
    Never the same manufacturer twice either...

    What's the deal?

    --
    Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
  89. Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by jpowers · · Score: 1
    Dell's PCs are so goddamned expensive I don't see how their "special relationship" benefits anyone. Everytime I get price quotes on PCs from these companies there's Dell, 20% more than everyone else.

    I can see where you could make an argument from quality or support comparing Dell with Gateway or something, but if you can't even compete with IBM and Compaq on price, there's something wrong.

    I asked these people for a quote on 45 Celeron 466s last year and even IBM had them beat, part for part, by like $20,000. WTF? If the cost of their products is related in any way to their "relationship" with MS/Intel, I say they need to start carrying other people's processors ASAP.

    -jpowers
    You Know You've Been Watching Too Much Ranma 1/2 When...
    --

    -jpowers
    1. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by kaniff · · Score: 1

      I think one of the benefits is that Dell gets first dibs on OEM chips. Intel is making *VERY* few 1Ghz P3s right now, and you got to be in the loop to get one. Dell is in the loop. Intel may put to them the offer of 1Ghz chips in return for remaining an Intel only vendor.

      I think Intel is going to have to get their shit together if they don't wanna be pummeled by AMD here in the near future.

    2. Re:Dell's Special Relationship with Intel? by barleyguy · · Score: 2

      Dell's PCs are so goddamned expensive I don't see how their "special relationship" benefits anyone.

      Dell has a huge advertising co-op with Intel, so the special relationship mostly benefits Dell, by getting them millions of dollars of free advertising. Also, they got price protection on RDRAM, which allows them to peddle some of Intel's otherwise worthless 820 motherboards. Also, many of Dell's computers are Intel barebones systems.

      I'm sure if anyone implied that their special relationship benefits the customer. It definitely benefits Dell, though, which is why they will have a strong resistance to upsetting Intel, even if it hurts their profits.

      If Dell goes AMD, that will be a warning sign to Intel that they no longer dominate the market.

      --
      --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
  90. Where the hell do they get these names? by Valur · · Score: 2

    Thunderbird? Duron? Athlon?

    They sound like secret weapons from a bad sci-fi movie...

    --
    Hosting for Creators: http://rpg-works.net
    1. Re:Where the hell do they get these names? by taniwha · · Score: 2

      Thunderbird/Spitfire/Mustang etc are almost certainly internal names for the project - Athlon/Duron/Itanium etc are made up 'marketting' names chosen because they're words that (hopefully unless someone screwed up) haven't been used in the English language before - thus avoiding all sorts of potential trademark pitfalls

  91. Silly competition by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

    If AMD and Intel entered a real men's competition to see who's who, instead of "my proc has a more kinky name than yours" peeing contest, it would be the sports called Pentathlon.

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  92. Celerons Beware by Tony_Cross · · Score: 1

    Well-I'm really glad that the Duron will be out soon. The celeron is inferior to the pentium 3 chip, but the duron is nearly (in my opinion) equal to the performance of the p3. So, hopefully we will soon have p3 caliber chips for less price than the inferior celerons. Good job AMD!


    --------------------------------------------

    --


    --------------------------------------------

    "
  93. Duron - Durex by Shoeboy · · Score: 5

    From theregister.co.uk:
    AMD practises safe computing
    Relax, you'll just feel a tiny prick
    Chimpzilla's new - ahem - entry level chip, Duron, would appear to share advanced technology with condom giant Durex, if the contraceptive company's website here is to be believed.

    The site states: "New technology has considerably improved the condom and enabled the production of far more sophisticated versions than our ancestors were used to. The latest development is DUREX Avanti made from a unique polyurethane material, DURON, which is twice as strong as latex enabling a thinner, more sensitive film."

    AMD would not confirm rumours that Duron would ship in packets of three rather than trays of ten, nor that the company was planning a 'Duron Inside' ad campaign. ®


    Looks like you'll need to lap that Duron processor as it may be ribbed for her pleasure.

    The chip may grow flaccid if not in use.

    Feel free to make your own juvenile jokes.

    --Shoeboy
    (former microserf)

    1. Re:Duron - Durex by Shoeboy · · Score: 2

      It's also worth noting that you must be over 18 and supply a credit card number to view the duron being inserted into amd's new socket architecture.

      I wonder if they make spermicidal thermal paste.

      --Shoeboy
      (former microserf)

    2. Re:Duron - Durex by zorgon · · Score: 2
      More:

      Durian: Incredibly smelly Indonesian fruit.
      Duroc: Castrated male pig.

      C'mon chip firms, enough with the cute names already. Us geeks liked numbers just fine, and they work fine for car marketdroids. Let's have the numbers back now, thanx...

      --

      I am quite civilized, and I should be brought a beer immediately. -- Bruce Sterling

  94. The problem with AMD/SMP .... by taniwha · · Score: 2
    Is sadly going to be that you will need a special chipset - unlike Intel, where the same memory controller that does single processor work is used for SMP, the AMD memory controller for SMP will have to be a seperate SKU (because it needs an extra set of 90-odd pins to talk to the other CPU) - the upside to this is that it's likely to perform better, the downside is that because this chip will ONLY be used in Athlon SMP boards it's volume will be low and as a result its cost is likely to be much higher (unlike for example an Intel 440BX which is used in many many single CPU boards and a relatively small number of SMP boards).

    I currently buy SuperMicro P6DBEs (dual cpu 440BX boards) 10-20 at a time @~$160 a piece - I'd jump at the chance to be able to buy something similar that's Athlon based - but at a similar, or lower, all up (stuffed including CPUs) price - sadly I doubt this is going to happen any time soon

    1. Re:The problem with AMD/SMP .... by michael.creasy · · Score: 1

      According to this article at The Register.
      http://www.theregister.co.uk/000520-000006.html
      We shoud see dual Socket A boards fairly soon, which can only be a good thing.

      My Webcam

  95. Important considerations by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    We already know that the AMD Duron and the "Thunderbird" variant of the Athlon CPU will be great, if only because they are based on the modern Athlon CPU core with its 128 KB L1 cache and the all-new FPU unit.

    The big considerations in regards to these new CPU's are chipset support and motherboard availability. In regards to chipset support, will AMD finally make the 760 chipset avaiable? And when will VIA Technologies ship the Apollo KZ133 chipset, the one that will support the Socket A design natively? And how about availability of motherboards that use Socket A? Once the 760 and Apollo KZ133 chipset motherboards become widely available, then AMD will avoid the issue of plenty of CPUs but no motherboard situation that plagued initial Athlon shipments last summer.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  96. Price/Performance by PopeAlien · · Score: 1

    "The bus will certainly be faster," Brookwood said of the Duron. "That may make a slight difference. But in the value segment people generally buy on price, rather than features or performance."

    I count myself in the value segment (i.e. cheap bastard), but I want the best performance and features for that price.. Does anyone know what the bus speed difference (200mhz) makes on performance? I imagine this would be a prime bottle-neck, and I'm curious why Intel is not working in this bus speed range yet?
    -

  97. Duron/Thunderbird mobo/chipset support by SpinyNorman · · Score: 2

    For slot-A/socket-A mobo information, you can check http://www.slota.com (socketa.com points to the same page).

    The KZ133 has been sampling for a long time, and will be available in volume along with socket-A motherboards to coincide with the Duron/Thunderbord launch in early June. There are at least 3 socket-A motherboards that should be available at launch (the FIC mobo is already on pricewatch.com - search for "Duron" or "Thunderbird").

    There will also initially be some slot-A Thunderbirds to ease the transition, and these will work with existing AMD 750 based slot-A motherboards, although don't expect to be able to buy a slot-A Thunderbird in retail - they are likely to only show up in OEM computers.

    The AMD 760 chipset is for DDR and will be available in Q3. There is also the 760-MP (aka 770) which will support 2-way SMP as well as DDR.

    There are also many other AMD chipsets coming, such as Micron's DDR/SMP ones, Via's KZ266 for DDR, ALI (Acer Labs) support, etc.

  98. Duron L2 cache by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

    Duron has 64K L2 cache, but it's exclusive so there's no duplication of what's in L1 and L2. Total Duron cache is 192K = 128K L1 + 64K L2, which is more than Celeron (I or II).

  99. No... Intel doesn't play into by CMiYC · · Score: 1

    No....

    There's always a backend concern that if Dell/Anyone started using AMD that Intel would go "no no no." Fortuantly things have gotten to a point that Intel wouldn't want the publicity that would be created from something like that to happen. Besides, Intel has a prominent place (at this point) in the x86 server market. Most companies wouldn't be ready to trade any of their Intel product lines for AMD lines... it is more likely they'd augment their product lines with AMD based solutions.

    ---