The Fastest Processor You Can't Run
auld_wyrm writes "Intel is trying to push the news of AMD's Barcelona launch out of the headlines with the release of the Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9770, a 3.20 GHz CPU that runs on a 1600 MHz front-side bus. It is the fastest consumer level processor that has come out, but don't plan on running it anytime soon. The ~$1200 price tag, and the lack of any motherboards that support a 1600MHz FSB will stop this unneeded answer to Barcelona from appearing in enthusiast's PCs for Christmas. Still, the benchmarks from this powerful CPU are something awesome to behold."
How do you benchmark a processor when there are no motherboards that support it?
where are these benchmarks you speak of and why did they create this processor without a motherboard that is available for actual use?
Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
Reminds me of all that stuff I read for years in Pop Science and Pop Mechanics -- ultra cool stuff you'll never lay your hands on. Well, this will be available, but probably not for 6 months. Meanwhile, I'm not about to upgrade my mobo for it anyway. I work in Photoshop on an Athlon 64, the cheapest one available about a year ago, and it's still no issue of speed, memory is the problem, having enough of it. Need mobos which can hold 16 GB of memory, not faster CPUs.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Do you make your own shoes and clothes or do you go out and buy them from "other" people outside of your household? Do you milk your own cow in your backyard or do you buy your milk at the grocery store? My guess is that you do what you do best in exchange for money and trade it for things that other make more efficiently. That way the total amount of production is greater because you and others are specializing in what you make. For the same reason it would be stupid to make all your own goods inside your own household it would be stupid for a country to make all of its goods inside of its borders. Comparative advantage increases division of labor which increases total production(AKA you become more wealthy). Making everything yourself is a good way to make yourself extremely poor.
Creative Demolition
Remember when there weren't any non-workstation dual core processors yet and MS was saying you'd need one for Longhorn/Vista?
behold... the fastest Intel processor to date , watch it melt next to a Power5 or Power6 from IBM..
Huh? Multitasking doesn't take much grunt. A 7 MHz Amiga can do it without any slowdown at all. And I have a 300 MHz Pentium II running a long, long pipeline of curl, awk, and a shitload of seds all the time, and it's almost totally I/O bound. CPU doesn't matter at all for multitasking.
It's all about the apps you're running, not how many there happen to be.
"I wonder why no other country, even those technologically [more] advanced, have produced anything remotely comparable to Intel and AMD processors yet."
Well, let's just say, in Soviet Russia, CPU processes you!
ARM is british designed. SH4 is Japanese designed. Nobody else has produced anything remotely comparable to x86 because x86 sucks. There's a lot of smart people polishing that turd, but it's still a turd.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Conversely, it allows developers to write programs that are easier to debug, faster to develop, and easier to add features to (that yes, take up more CPU cycles than an obfuscated, buggy "optimized" application).
Jeremy
Hm... my $600 Mac Mini runs Leopard just fine and I fully expect it will run 10.6 as well. It's got as much processor power as the MBP I use routinely for heavy duty medical image processing development. The only thing it's lacking in, sort of, is 3D video performance, but it's more than enough to run all the eye candy in Leopard with some left over for a few image pro algorithms that run on the GPU.
It doesn't spend a core running antivirus or even half a core running DRM.
I've been running Vista Business Edition now for 2 weeks on a Dell Optiplex 745 (E6700 chip) with 2GB RAM. Once I turned the User Account Control security crap off it's been a pleasure to use. Besides updates and new software installs I've only been forced to reboot once.
/. members say. Corporate business users aren't running Vista yet; because all of their applications need to be certified to run properly on Vista before they will support it. It's the third-party vendor support that will make or break Vista, not QX9770 chips and a TB or RAM.
It's not as bad as all the
I understand this is a LINUX fanboy community (I run Debian on my crusty slow old laptop), but after a while it sounds like a broken record here.
Kevin
Irrational Diversions