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Intel Discontinues Extreme Edition P4

bizpile writes "X-bit Labs reports that Intel is stopping production of its Extreme Edition Pentium 4s. The company said in its statement sent to clients, 'Market demand for the Intel Pentium 4 processor Extreme Edition supporting Hyper-Threading technology 3.20GHz with 800MHz processor system bus in mPGA478 packaging has shifted to higher performance Intel processors.'"

4 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. Branding by mauthbaux · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Honestly, I think that the only thing that as far as cost and performance ratios go, AMD has the upper hand. People who keep up with the industry are (I assume) fairly well aware of this fact.

    From what I can tell, intel's only remaining advantages are in niche markets (not consumer desktops), and the fact that most people buying consumer-level desktops haven't even heard of AMD. I doubt that AMD will be able to overthrow intel's brand-recognition supremacy, but intel will be facing some tough decisions if they do...

    --
    "Operating systems suck: you're better off using only the BIOS" --trainsaw.com
  2. Re:Of course it failed; it was a useless gimmick by rsmith-mac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It may have been a failed gimmick performance wise, but it puts AMD in an odd situation. AMD had the Athlon FX line positioned against the P4EE's, while the high-end A64's went against the normal P4's(the 3800+ is priced similar to the 3.6ghz P4, etc), and now the P4EE line isn't there. AMD is going to need to do some repositioning of the FX line, otherwise it will fall in between the consumer A64, and the workstation/server Opteron 1xx line.

  3. No surprise by slayer99 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Hyperthreading is a neat hack, nothing more. It seems designed exclusively to fool non-techies into thinking that they have a 2 or 4 way system when in fact they have half the number of actual processors, and additional really crippled ones.

    That combined with the price means my last purchase was a pair of dual opteron workstations.

    --
    Martin Brooks / Slayer99 #linux / UIN 2178117
  4. Re:Sadly some techies are fooled just as well by demon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While SPARC and MIPS64 and other architectures now have Intel CPUs giving them a run for their money CPU-performance-wise, those systems still kick pretty much any Intel- or AMD-based system's ass in I/O bandwidth. AMD systems have a definite advantage over Intel, however, due to their licensing of the HyperTransport bus design from Alpha Processor Inc., or whoever the current holders are of the Alpha processor design - it really does kick a lot of ass. However systems like the SPARCs were designed with the ability to handle high I/O load in mind, and commmodity systems still aren't quite so much so.

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"