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AMD Releases Sempron Earlier Than Expected

I_am_Rambi writes "AMD has released the Sempron today, a release date that moved up from Aug 17th. Because of this move, some of the reviews that are out, will be continued later on. Some sites already have reviews including Toms Hardware, Anandtech, and Tech Report. The Sempron, AMDs budget processor, is staged against the Intel Celeron." Jason Jacobs writes with a review on Techware Labs, and Hack Jandy adds a link to a review at HotHardware, writing "it appears as though the Socket A based Sempron performs abysmally while dollar for dollar the Socket 754 version levels every Intel CPU."

7 of 187 comments (clear)

  1. By "performs abysmally" by eddy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By "it appears as though the Socket A based Sempron performs abysmally" they probably mean that these $30-40 budget processors are only ~5-8 times faster than as say a "K6-2 400" or equalient "Pentium 2" -- processors which did provide and still provide all the performance you need on a non-gaming/non-dev desktop machine.

    "Bah, these $30 chips don't run Doom 3 at Max Extreme Settings. We're so disappointed. They are useless!"

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    Belief is the currency of delusion.
    1. Re:By "performs abysmally" by Short+Circuit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was a little disappointed by the HotHardware review...they're stacking AMD's value processor line against older versions of Intel's performance line. That makes sense until you try to compare things that depend on, e.g. processor caches.

    2. Re:By "performs abysmally" by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      it's all about marketing, nothing else.

      if you actually bothered to read up a bit.. the first semprons provided are just athlon xp's rebranded and flagged with a performance number that's higher so it can be compared to celerons mhz rating.

      this no doubt is because people are just buying by the number on the cpu, a normal consumer doesn't really know anything but the 2.8ghz number on the celly.

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  2. Annoyed by artlu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am really annoyed that Intel and AMD market these low end procs. Usually for $10 more you can get a similar speed older processor that performs better. Most consumers do not know the difference and they buy junk HP desktops that I used to have to fix every other week.

    GroupShares Inc.

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    artlu.net
  3. Re:Sempron Fi by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sempron is largely a branding exercise, so the name is important. The Sempron name is intended to evoke phrases like "semper fidelis" and other such tokens of solidity and steadfastness.

    It's meant to seperate the processor from the Athlon series which has confused most people. The article states that most people probably don't know (or care to know) that there is a huge difference between the AthlonXP and the Athlon64.

  4. AMD vs Intel by myte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am so happy that AMD is really giving Intel a run for their money. I remember when they had so many problems with their first few processors. Now that their processors are strong and stable they have a lot of 'followers'. Their processors are a great value and definately worth every penny.

    I love rooting for the underdog and watching them really become a force in the market. Kudos to AMD and good luck in the future.

  5. Re:Sempron Fi by rpdillon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I still have trouble believing that AMD fell into the same trap Intel fell into with Pentium. IMHO, Pentium M should have never been so named: it was new technology and it should have been marketed as such. AMD did the same thing with AthlonXP and Athlon64...a shame, because people *don't* understand the difference at a basic consumer level. I understand that name-brand does have value, but you still want to give the public a good idea (via your naming scheme) when one product breaks away from the others on a technology/performance level. JM2C...