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45nm Phenom II Matches Core 2 Quad, Trails Core i7

An anonymous reader writes "AMD recently debuted its 45nm Phenom II processors, and The Tech Report has already run them through a complete suite of benchmarks to see how they perform compared to Intel's latest and greatest. The new 2.8GHz and 3GHz Phenom IIs are in a dead heat with like-priced Core 2 Quads, but they generally fall well behind Intel's new Core i7 chips. TR concludes that AMD's future doesn't look as bleak as some say, and future Phenom IIs could compete favorably with more affordable Core i7 derivatives."

234 comments

  1. Not first post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    But it could have been if I had a Core i7!

  2. The problem with benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    is that its not the code you actually will run.

    1. Re:The problem with benchmarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're testing video encoding, Photoshop, games, etc. (as the article does), then um, yes, this is the code you will actually run.

  3. AMD has failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AMD has failed to deliver a decent chip since the Athlon.

    We still need AMD for competition, but they should at least have released something to go up against the i7 instead of the dated C2Q....

    1. Re:AMD has failed by neokushan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The Athlon (I assume you mean the Athlon 64, the older athlons were a bit...hot...and prone to melting if the heatsink failed) was never a "decent" Chip, per se, it just so happens that netburst was shit and AMD happened to get more things right than they usually do.

      I don't know how Intel managed to become so disorganised, but they've shown how powerful they really are as of late.

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    2. Re:AMD has failed by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Uhm, Athlon 64 vs Pentium 4 didn't made it into your comparison? I'd say I'd prefer Athlon-XP over Pentium 4 to.

      I don't know which I'd prefer of Core Duo and Athlon64 X2.

    3. Re:AMD has failed by afidel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Opteron 838x (shanghai) stomps all over anything available from Intel, they won't have a part that competes until 2H'09 at the earliest when they get the Xeon Corei7 working.

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    4. Re:AMD has failed by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Athlon (I assume you mean the Athlon 64, the older athlons were a bit...hot...and prone to melting if the heatsink failed) was never a "decent" Chip, per se, it just so happens that netburst was shit and AMD happened to get more things right than they usually do.

      I had an Athlon 500Mhz (the oldest, slowest, first one they ever made -- it was back when AMD was just jumping on that fad of putting the chip on a slot instead of a socket). First of all, this was before NetBurst, so it was competing against P3s, not P4s. Second, it was better than the P3. I know this because if the P3 had been better, I would have gotten it instead. The K6-2s were the last "not decent" chips AMD made.

      And it also did not run hot. A few years later, when I was finally upgrading the graphics card (from a TNT2 to a GeForce 3), I noticed that I had never even plugged in the CPU fan! It had run perfectly well passively-cooled that whole time!

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    5. Re:AMD has failed by Heather+D · · Score: 1

      I had one of those old slot-A systems that had had its fan seize up. It overheated and eventually failed and when I went in to check it out the can had a coating of dust on it. It had evidently been running for some months with a seized fan and only the heat of oncoming summer had revealed the problem.

    6. Re:AMD has failed by michrech · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest problem with the AthlonXP/MP was the lack of a heat spreader, which caused lots of people (you paying attention Patric Norton?!) lots of headaches as they attempted to put the heatsink on without chipping the processor.

      Another issue was not getting the heatsink quite flat on the chip, causing it to be rather ineffective in removing heat from the processor, leading to temperature shutdowns (either due to blown chips, or from the newer mainboards that had temperature sensors built in.

      That said, I never managed to break one in that way, and I built quite a few machines based on those chips. I think I fared better than Patric because I put the heatsink on the chip while the board was sitting on my bench instead of trying to do so while the power supply was in my way...

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  4. The problem with Core i7 by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Informative

    is that the CPU price is only one component of a significantly higher overall platform cost. Both memory and mainboard cost significantly more if you want to build an i7 rig.

    --
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    1. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      Memory doesn't cost *that* much more. More, yes, but it's not an obscene amount.

      However, the mobos are still running at 200$ for the cheapest ones. Oomph.

    2. Re:The problem with Core i7 by electrosoccertux · · Score: 5, Informative

      To be more specific, the motherboards are $200+ on the low end of the spectrum whereas there are a wealth of Phenom II supporting motherboards for $100; and 4GB of DDR3 is only now approaching $100. 4GB of DDR2, OTOH, (which works with the AMD Phenom II), can be had for $20 if you look for it. If you're too lazy to look for these deals, it can be had for $40 no rebates.

      AMD has a real winner on their hands here.

    3. Re:The problem with Core i7 by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean. I need to update my 5 year old computer because the new Adobe Lightroom brings it to a crawl when rendering. Since the i7 was just about to come out, I figured I'd wait. I knew there would be a premium for it, but I was prepared for that....until it came out and I found out just what the premium would be. $300 for the CPU was something I was prepared for, but $250 for the motherboard, and $25+/GB was a bit more than I was expecting.

    4. Re:The problem with Core i7 by dave420 · · Score: 1

      The phrase "you get what you pay for" springs to mind :)

    5. Re:The problem with Core i7 by glennpratt · · Score: 1

      With regards to the overpriced motherboards and DDR3? Not really, that's not why I would pay for an i7 system, it's the processor.

      Also, the AM3 Phenom's will be backwards compatible with AM2+ and support DDR2 & 3. Not saying that makes it better then i7, but it certainly is nice for platform cost and upgradibility.

    6. Re:The problem with Core i7 by shoptroll · · Score: 1

      There's very little competition in the retail channels for i7 boards. I think there's fewer than 10 boards listed on Newegg when I checked a few weeks ago. I expect this will change in the coming months, which should bring down the price a little bit.

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    7. Re:The problem with Core i7 by citizenr · · Score: 3, Funny

      Memory doesn't cost *that* much more.

      yes, its *only* twice

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    8. Re:The problem with Core i7 by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't know about most people, but when I budget for a new build I budget the entire thing as a single purchase. So if the CPU+mobo+RAM cost $200 less I will put that money into faster graphics or more memory or a nicer display or whatever.

      I suspect it's a small, small group who buy the best that's available on the market with no concern for an overall budget.

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    9. Re:The problem with Core i7 by aliquis · · Score: 1

      But considering todays prices of DDR II even twice as much is kind of nothing =P.

      People will spend more money on accessories with blue LEDs!

    10. Re:The problem with Core i7 by ZirbMonkey · · Score: 3, Informative

      I just built an i7 system, splurged on a few nicer options and ended up at just about $1000 for the build. Had I been more fiscal:
      MB = $250
      i7 920 = $300
      3GB Ram = $100
      PSU = $100
      Case = $50
      Total = $800

      But if you already have an AM2 MB, a $250 upgrade puts you back in the ballpark of being on the cutting edge. If someone wants to save $650 on a full system upgrade, it makes a lot of sense to me.

    11. Re:The problem with Core i7 by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Yeah, for a quad DDR II-system for cheap it looks like AMD wins.

      Even cheaper gaming DDR II-system I guess it's intel E8500.

      I don't know if Core i7 920 + motherboard is worth the extra money for what they deliver, maybe it gets more worth it with a more expensive CPU since you'll have so much added cost for motherboard and memory anyway. DDR 3 offers additional benefits though (atleast theoretically.)

      So if you want the latest and greatest Intel still wins.

    12. Re:The problem with Core i7 by rezalas · · Score: 5, Informative

      You are missing a few parts there bud. Like video card, hard drive, DVDRW, Sound card (onboard sound blows). The difference is with a Phenom II, you get all that included in the price you listed as well as the other parts. Look at adding about $300 to your total that wouldn't be added with AMD.

    13. Re:The problem with Core i7 by billcopc · · Score: 1

      $25+/GB is the cheapest it's ever been! What is your point ?

      I do agree I7 motherboards are ridiculously overpriced and the selection is pathetic, especially considering how many i965 and P35 boards were dumped into the market below $100 just a year ago.

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    14. Re:The problem with Core i7 by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Admittedly, when I built my wife's computer, I spent more on the fancy blue-lighted fans than I did on the memory. /me hangs head in shame, holds out geek card

    15. Re:The problem with Core i7 by kimvette · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I wouldn't take 4GB of DDR2 RAM for $20.00 because it's usually going to be "value RAM" and not very reliable.

      As far as $200 for a motherboard goes: if you want a GOOD motherboard with a decent RMA process, a motherboard is generally going to cost at least $225 anyway, so to choose based on motherboard price for a new system, it's a toss-up. To choose based on performance, it's a no-brainer.

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    16. Re:The problem with Core i7 by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, OCZ didn't qualify as "value ram". During boxing day they had 4 gigs of PC2-6400 going for $20 after rebate - and that's in Canadian dollars. Now that the holidays are over, the price has gone up to $36.99. The same store is also offering 4 gigs of OCZ PC2-8000 for $44.99. I'm sure you can find it for much cheaper in the US, though.

    17. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Erikderzweite · · Score: 2, Funny

      You say that you didn't turn it in when you got married?!

    18. Re:The problem with Core i7 by oldspewey · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Never mind about the memory vs. the lights ... the important question is: did you get any that night?

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    19. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're performing on the same level as the Core 2 Quad, I'd rather go with the Intel offering. That way if I need any support down the road I know the company will still exist.

    20. Re:The problem with Core i7 by scorp1us · · Score: 1

      I believe this is OK.

      I've been surprised how similar hardware for PCs and servers has been over the years. Lets face it, if you can't get your job done on a cheap PC today, you have some computational tasks that would benefit from high-end hardware, or, can be paralleled. given that parallelism is achieved over networks, you now have a new problem.

      Also, given that companies have money and people don't, I am surprised this dichotomy has not already developed - that all apps are compatible, but commercial grade hardware is so much more expensive and faster.

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    21. Re:The problem with Core i7 by xenolion · · Score: 0

      Never mind about the memory vs. the lights ... the important question is: did you get any that night?

      I'm guessing your not married....

    22. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Gerzel · · Score: 1

      Not a problem at all. Install a second network interface and use one for internet the other for parallel processing.

      It would provide a wall, a flaming wall to stop bad external network traffic, and so I dub my new invention a network "Wall of Flame."

    23. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      Not to mention a good selection of AMD boards support ECC memory (which adds about £4 to the £37 of 4GB DDR2-800) all across the price range; want a Core i7 with ECC support? That'll be £250 for the motherboard and £120 for 3GB of DDR3. And good luck finding a Core 2 board with ECC support.

      You might say "meh, why do you need ECC?"; I think it's quite important when you can fit 12-16GB in a machine, and I'd rather the first sign of a memory problem be a MCE noted in my system log rather than repeated crashes or silent data loss.

      Given that I can have it with AMD for an extra £4 with more than adequate performance, while I can barely even *find* it with the already more expensive Intel, well...

    24. Re:The problem with Core i7 by ZmeiGorynych · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's because the commercial grade hardware of 2 years ago loses to this year's cheap hardware on all points except robustness?

      There is indeed that tier of commercial-grade hardware that's a lot more expensive, but it's not speed that you pay for there, it's reliability.

    25. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Nexus7 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      On the video card, yes, the poster missed it. No LGA1366 board has onboard video.

      On the sound however, the onboard audio is great if all you're going to do with it is SPDIF out it to a receiver. And the $300 board have optical and/or coax out.

    26. Re:The problem with Core i7 by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      I said "geek card" not "monk card". ;)

    27. Re:The problem with Core i7 by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Never mind about the memory vs. the lights ... the important question is: did you get any that night?

      *blink*

      Bachelor, huh?

    28. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Kayden · · Score: 1

      At launch of the i7 platform, dual channel kits were about $150 for 2 2gb sticks and tri channel kits of 2gb x3 were about $200. Those were 1600mhz sticks too boot. You could get 1066 or 1333 for much cheaper. It was a 25% increase for 33% more ram. However, now the old dual channel ddr3 kits are taking a nose dive because they require 1.8+ volts to run and the i7 platform is spec'd for 1.65 and lower. They're trying to clear out the older higher voltage stuff. It also makes sense for them to charge more because they have to put forward the same performance at a significantly lower voltage. Additionally, you have to consider brands. Corsair is almost always the most expensive in it's category. I was just shopping for some ram and OCZ and Corsair had sticks with identical specs, yet the Corsair was almost twice as much. Corsair had big black fins for heatsinks and that was about the only difference.

    29. Re:The problem with Core i7 by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      $25+/GB is the cheapest it's ever been! What is your point ?

      Really? Funny, because when I look at DDR2 memory on newegg I'm seeing lots going for $9-$12/GB. That's my point...the memory for this cpu is currently more than twice what it was for previous ones.

    30. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is spot on. I just ordered a complete system (parts from Newegg) last night, and the difference was $320 between equivalent i7/ddr3 and ph2/ddr2. I was building a higher end system, so I opted with the more expensive option. In the end it was a 20% difference overall, and I thought it was worth it, since my last machine served for several years.

    31. Re:The problem with Core i7 by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Some men get a new "monk card" after the honeymoon.

      --
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    32. Re:The problem with Core i7 by evilbessie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I seriously doubt you are old enough to have had a mobo with truly awful sound (or even the bad old days of no sound at all). For most people having shitty little 10w speakers plugged in you are not going to notice the difference, hell even with better speakers you would be hard pressed. You only need a sound card if you need some more features/channels/etc. The modern mobos have perfectly serviceable sound for most applications.

    33. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some nen don't get a new "monk card" until after the second pregnancy. And then it's for 18 years, or more :D

    34. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Agripa · · Score: 1

      As far as $200 for a motherboard goes: if you want a GOOD motherboard with a decent RMA process, a motherboard is generally going to cost at least $225 anyway, ...

      What would be a good motherboard with a decent RMA process for a Phenom II then?

      NewEgg lists AM2+ motheboards from Asus and Gigabyte in the range of $80 to $190. Of those, the high end integrated graphics ones are about $140 and even they support dual Crossfire.

    35. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Guspaz · · Score: 2, Informative

      Memory costs for high-end DDR3 can be several TIMES that of high-end DDR2.

      Consider this: high-end DDR2 could be considered DDR2-1066. Just built a rig with 4GB of DDR2-1066, cost me $44.

      At the same store, from the same memory manufacturer, 4GB of DDR3-1600 (the high-end equivalent) costs $136, three times the price.

      If you cry foul and want to see DDR3-1066 (the slowest DDR3), things improve slightly; the same brand, 4GB goes for $99, only double the price.

      In short, DDR3 costs 2x to 3x the price of DDR2, which significantly raises the total cost of building a system. Especially if you wanted to put 8GB or more in a system.

    36. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm seeing 3x2GB Corsair Dominator 1600 1.65v cl8 for us225 and the equivalent OCZ Gold for us180.

    37. Re:The problem with Core i7 by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Nah, that was just his manhood and dignity he turned in at the altar.

      Seriously though, the great thing about all this IMHO is how far the prices have fallen for both Intel and AMD systems. I remember when you built a PC if it cost you less than $1000 it was frankly garbage. Now I have been building quite good machines for $300-400 that do everything my customers could ever want and then some. So yes, if you want the absolute balls to the wall maximum power you can possibly get then it will cost a pretty penny. But for most folks even the bottom of the line AMD and Intel dual cores are frankly overkill in terms of performance. So I personally hope AMD survives this downturn because I shudder to think what the prices would be if Intel owns the market. Remember what the prices were like when the Pentium was the only real chip out there with decent horsepower? Man that was nasty.

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    38. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      Mobo sound sounds truly awful on newer systems as well.

      But then so do the cheap speakers most people use, not to mention what an ipod sounds like.

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    39. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Memory costs for high-end DDR3 can be several TIMES that of high-end DDR2.

      ... At the same store, from the same memory manufacturer, 4GB of DDR3-1600 (the high-end equivalent) costs $136, three times the price.

      Oh you poor, poor child. It wasn't even 15 years ago when ram was $600 for 4 MEGA bytes.

    40. Re:The problem with Core i7 by NinthAgendaDotCom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I produce music and recently installed a PCI soundcard to use insted of the onboard sound. I immediately noticed a different: no background hiss/noise anymore. I also used to hear high pitched sounds that correlated with HDD access.

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    41. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Kamokazi · · Score: 1

      But that won't last for much longer. The only chipset available right now is the high end X58. The mainstream and 3rd party chipsets will be here sooner or later, and DDR3 prices have fallen a lot already, and they will continue to do so.

      Either way I'm quite excited to see AMD gaining back ground. Fanboism is bad, competetion is good. Lately I've been using Intel chips for server and higher-end builds, and AMD for mid-lower end builds-I had used AMD almost exclusively in the P4 days. The Core i7 prices are a bit higher than I like, hopefully this will give Intel incentive to lower them, or at least drop prices on Core 2 Quads, which would make them a hell of a mid-range chip.

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    42. Re:The problem with Core i7 by tknd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Onboard sound really sucks. Get really good head phones and you'll hear hiss, noise, or interference whenever your system does something. I have Sennheiser HD 280 pro headphones with passive noise canceling and I tell you, there is a huge difference. Now if you have crappy head phones that let in all the sound from your whining computer fans, then sure, you'll never notice the noise and hiss the onboard sound produces.

    43. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Heather+D · · Score: 1

      I get a little hiss sometimes but its only noticeable if I'm listening for it. No squeals or squeaks. I've heard the onboard sound stinks argument before but so far no one has been able to tell that it was onboard or not in my systems.

    44. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who clearly remembers when sound = beep, and who spent his paperroute money on an AdLib card, I still think OP is right: onboard sound blows. Sure, if you have shitty speakers, and don't care AT ALL about sound, they might be fine. But try wearing a pair of headphones. Most modern mobos have horrible interference on the audio bus, to the point where even HDD and USB activity causes static, which is very noticable with a pair of headphones.

    45. Re:The problem with Core i7 by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      To be fair, it's less than twice as much, depending on how insanely obsessed you are with performance. For example, mwave has the Kingston DDR2 1066MHz 2GB kit for $30, and the Corsair DDR3 1066MHz 2GB kit for $52 (looking only in their "High Performance" RAM categories). More expensive, yes, but not quite twice as much (for an arguably better brand, at that).

      It's trivially easy to spend more on DDR2 than on DDR3.

    46. Re:The problem with Core i7 by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should shop elsewhere?

    47. Re:The problem with Core i7 by michrech · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one who had a Gravis Ultrasound card (in my case, the MAX)?

      o/~ Meeeemmmmoooorrriiieesssss....... o/~

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    48. Re:The problem with Core i7 by leabre · · Score: 1

      I picked up two rigs using Core i7 920 with 12GB RAM and ATI Radeon 4850 and 24" monitors. I could not be happier. These are by far the best machines I've owned so far. Oh, I should mention, though they shipped with Vista 64-bit, being an MSDN subscriber and software developer of high computing applications, I ended up installing Windows Server 2008 Datacenter 64-bit and it works flawlessly (I enabled the Aero theme and glass)

    49. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is one of the stupidest things I've ever heard. Here's what normal people do: Pick your components and add up the cost, and then decide if you can afford it and/or think it's worth it. If not, lower qualities/quantities of components until you do.

      Who the hell pulls a dollar amount out of their ass and then plays a game of trying to maximally fit components to it? And if you have everything you want/need, and it turns out it was $200 less than you were expecting, why the hell would you spend more money on some things you don't need? Is this an allowance from your parents or something and you want to use it all up?

    50. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      1800 dollar Dell Studio XPS's? (I'm more interested in their "workstation" class PC's, but who knows how long til they're using Nehalem.)

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    51. Re:The problem with Core i7 by xyxvv · · Score: 1

      Something with South bridge 750, so ether a 790GX or one of the newer 790FX/SB750 mobos, the earlier models had SB600, and don't overclock as well and lack a few features that SB750 added like Advanced Clock Control. I'm personally looking at this Asus http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131339 , though the DFI 790FX/SB750 also looks good. The Gigabyte DS4 seems to have mixed results though, while AMD used it for their demos to get the Phenom 2 to 6.2Ghz on LN2 others have had trouble with it in over volting stability, Which is kind of important since if I remember right AMD said that the Phenom 2 is rated safe to overvolt by them up to 1.55v. Most of the overclocking forums are already geared up in anticipation, if you plan on clocking it, take a look http://www.ocforums.com/showthread.php?t=591256 Here's to hoping I can afford to build out an all new box for Phenom 2 4-4.5Ghz on water, 8Gb of DDR2 1066 or better and an HD4870 1Gb, maybe one of those nice new XFX made black PCB ones, and see if I can get that up to 860Mhz Core/4.8Ghz ram on the water as well. Hello HD video editing, gaming and running 6 OSs in VMware at the same time without slowdowns.

    52. Re:The problem with Core i7 by xyxvv · · Score: 1

      Ok, why does the quick reply keep eating my returns?

    53. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had that problem too (hiss and various sounds. From the various sounds you could deduce quite a bit of what the computer was doing after a while).

      Then I switched to the spdif-connection to get the sound out to my amp. No hiss or any extra noise after that.

    54. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Suddenly_Dead · · Score: 1

      The noise and hiss is certainly a bit of an issue, but you can buy a simple volume controller (such as this one), and the problem is solved. That is, unless your onboard sound is absolutely godawful.

      This works for myself. I can even use my Shure e2c comfortably. The e2cs are sensitive enough that I can't use them comfortably with my iPod without the volume controller because of the hissing.

    55. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've noticed the same thing on my 6 year old ThinkPad...
      But my ~1 yr old desktop there is absolutely nothing of the sort. I am using good headphones.

    56. Re:The problem with Core i7 by swillden · · Score: 1

      passive noise canceling

      Is that audiophile-ese for foam insulation?

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    57. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      And a while back I was unable to afford an upgrade from 8iMB because I couldn't afford another 4 or 8 MiB. What's your point exactly? DDR3 costs are multiple times that of DDR2, historical RAM prices are irrelevant.

    58. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      I forgot to mention that the above prices are in Canadian dollars, and that they're typical (or slightly below average) for Canadian stores at the time I looked them up.

    59. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      I think that's videophile-ese for "I don't have an 800 watt pissing contest with 12 fans under my desk".

    60. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      ECC also causes a slight performance hit... That's why it's typically found in servers where stability and correctness are more important than outright performance.
      Gamers will probably favor non ECC.

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    61. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      The onboard sound is often poorly shielded, and will suffer EM interference from other components in the system... Tho if you use the digital output it's often much better.

      But you're so right about the cheap speakers, most "computer speakers" are complete garbage and will sound like total crap regardless of what you connect them to. So if you're just gonna use speakers like that, don't waste money on a decent sound card.

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    62. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Interesting...
      I would have used AMD for server and higher end systems, where the hypertransport interconnect and numa system would come into play (ie multiple physical cpus) , and intel for lower end systems with just 1 cpu...

      Haven't looked much at i7, but it supposedly catches up with hypertransport.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    63. Re:The problem with Core i7 by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      Key word being "slight". No gamer is going to notice the few percent performance reduction ECC introduces. I play a lot of games and I sure prefer having more piece of mind over the safety of my data than getting 122FPS instead of 118FPS in Left 4 Dead. If I *do* turn retarded, I can always turn it off.

    64. Re:The problem with Core i7 by leabre · · Score: 1

      I ordered them the day they became available, paid $1,399 each.

  5. Re:Nothing like keeping up with the Joneses... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is amazing progress considering where they were just last month. It really is an accomplishment.

  6. Good... but... by CajunArson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The main problem is that AMD is doing the exact same thing Intel did when the P4 was out: they went to a smaller litho process, slapped on cache, and cranked up the clockspeed. If you read the review carefully you'll note that while the new Phenoms are faster than some Core 2 quads, they are not faster on a clock-for-clock basis. Remember back when AMD was leading in that category and it was such a big deal?
        As of right now the Phenoms are a good deal IF you already own an AM2+ mobo... otherwise they are not a good deal for 2 reasons: 1. AMD is coming out with the incompatible AM3 socket that will use DDR3 memory in the next few months, so these current chips will have a very short shelf life; 2. Intel doesn't have to do any innovation at all to beat these chips, all it has to do is drop the prices on current Core 2 quads like the 9550 that outperform the Phenoms but are currently priced higher... dropping prices ain't rocket science and there are rumors these cuts could be coming by the end of the month.
          As for the Core i7, sure it is more expensive, but even the 920 model appears to wail on these chips, and there is a whole lot more future-proofness in buying a low-end i7 right now. Interestingly, the review mentions the new Phenoms have 758 million transistors which means they have about 27 million more transistors than Nehalem... but Nehalem at 2.66 Ghz is easily beating a Phenom at 3.0Ghz. It looks like what AMD really needs is a new architecture, but that does not appear to be coming any time soon.

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    1. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The Core I7 isn't all that future proof. Intel is going to bring out the consumer version of the I7 with guess what... A new Socket!
      I think that the AM2+ socket will have a good life span. The AM2 sure did.
      The thing really is though is that the Core2 and the X2 really are still "good enough". Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC.
      The Atom is the right now the most interesting CPU around. I think AMD should produce a two core version of the PhenomII or a 45nm X2 cpu.
      A very low power use AMD cpu combined with the 780G would be a great product right now.
      The only reason that any QuadCore interests me right now is that I am addicted to FSX.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Good... but... by CajunArson · · Score: 3, Informative

      There's a major problem with your logic. Intel is coming out with a lower-cost mainstream Nehalem, but it is not discontinuing the current i7 sockets, they will continue as a high-end option and you'll be able to slap 32nm Westmere's in there when the time comes. AM2+ is at the very end of the road. As for the older Core 2 quad socket 775's, they are getting nearer the end of the line, but with some price cuts the current 775 socket systems are still going to outperform anything AMD has until at least 2010... the Core 2's are at the end of the technology ramp-up road, but not at the end of the price-performance road.

      --
      AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
    3. Re:Good... but... by Carlosos · · Score: 1

      I believe that the AM2+ socket motherboards will last for a long time. If I remember right will the AM3 CPUs be compatible with the AM2 and AM2+ motherboard as the AM2+ CPUs were compatible with AM2 motherboards while only small features were missing when using an older socket with a newer CPU.

    4. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If you read the review carefully you'll note that while the new Phenoms are faster than some Core 2 quads, they are not faster on a clock-for-clock basis. Remember back when AMD was leading in that category and it was such a big deal?

      No, I don't remember that, because I never cared about it. I cared about performance per dollar, and I remember when AMD was leading in that category. And they're still doing .. ehhh .. ok.

      It's true that if I bought a new low or mid-end computer right now, it would probably have a core2duo. But that flips every few months as prices change. And if my budget were bigger (e.g. $2k-$3k for the whole box) it would consist of multiple Opterons and it would rip the head off anything buildable out of Intel parts (though i7 may change that too).

    5. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What calosos said is not true the AM3 will have backwards compatable memory in the first gen using DDR2 and DDR3 Compatable mobos but the AM3 is i diff socket all together

    6. Re:Good... but... by wild_berry · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The price cut is the clincher. I disagree that the compatibility with motherboards is an issue: all the reviews I've read describe an AM2+/AM3 hybrid part that supports both DDR2 and DDR3 which will allow you to upgrade the MB and RAM and keep the processor.

      AMD needing a new architecture is a myth: Changing the microarchitecture underneath the AMD64 set isn't going to yield enough improvement to make it totally worthwhile. Their pipeline length and IPC count are comparable to Intel, but AMD's smaller research team, budget and fabrication facilities mean that Intel's chips get implementation advances that AMD can't quite match. And then Intel get to control the prices in the marketplace due to their capacity and margins (although the increased availability of smaller dies in Phenom II will help AMD quite a bit). AMD are skewered by Intel's size and their ongoing debt write-offs of buying ATI. However, changing the game to incorporate Radeon-style parallel pipelines is a different story.

    7. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Yea but then you will be stuck with only high end stuff. I would wait until the consumer I7 hits unless you are a hard core gamer.
      But as I said I really am not all that interested in the highend. It is just really overkill right now. You can build a good X2 780G system for under $300 right now. Or less than you would spend for just an I7 CPU.
      Core2s are still a little more expensive but your right they are still a good choice.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    8. Re:Good... but... by glennpratt · · Score: 1

      I don't think we cared much about clock speed, even in the days of Netburst vs K8, hell the spreads were bigger when the 3.2 GHz P4 was common. Then it was Dollars vs Performance or TDP vs Performance, just like it is now.

    9. Re:Good... but... by AngelofDeath-02 · · Score: 1

      The thing really is though is that the Core2 and the X2 really are still "good enough". Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC.

      I'd love to play supcom and not lag =/
      Something tells me I need more than an I7 to do that, however...

      --
      No, I am not an English major. My posts are subject to typos and incorrect grammar. Do not expect perfection.
    10. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      AM3 is pin compatible with AM2+/AM2, it just adds faster HT and DDR3 support. My understanding is that Mobo suppliers can even choose to use the AM3 socket with DDR2, getting the (probably insignificant) benefit of faster HT but using cheaper RAM. The fact that the AM3 Phenoms have both DDR2 and DDR3 memory controlers means they van be used in AM2+ boards as long as there is a BIOS update. Could be used in AM2 boards as well from a hardware standpoint, but unfortunately (for me at least) there probably won't be any updated BIOSs for those boards.

    11. Re:Good... but... by Atriqus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Except that AM3 is compatible with many AM2+ boards; I know mine is. AM3 has both a DDR2 and DDR3 memory controller.

      --
      Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
    12. Re:Good... but... by nine-times · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The thing really is though is that the Core2 and the X2 really are still "good enough". Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC. The Atom is the right now the most interesting CPU around.

      Yeah, I've been thinking about that. For most businesses and individuals I talk to (and/or support), do you know what they use their computer for? Checking e-mail, surfing the web, writing papers/letters, holding their music collection and loading their iPods, and storing their digital pictures. They don't do much else.

      Now how fast of a processor do you need to do that? I'll give you a hint-- a lot of them are doing it on computers that are >5 years old, and they aren't complaining about speed unless they're loaded down with malware.

      I wonder where the computing industry is going next, because I feel like it's been a while since anyone came up with a new use for PCs that the masses were clamoring for. MP3s were the last one, and IIRC that's been commonplace for almost a decade now.

      It seems like where computers are going is not to be bigger/better/faster, but rather smaller/cheaper/more energy efficient. Something might break that trend, but until it does, I wonder how important it will actually be to be the "performance king".

    13. Re:Good... but... by __aardcx5948 · · Score: 1

      As of right now the Phenoms are a good deal IF you already own an AM2+ mobo... otherwise they are not a good deal for 2 reasons: 1. AMD is coming out with the incompatible AM3 socket that will use DDR3 memory in the next few months, so these current chips will have a very short shelf life;

      You can buy a Phenom II now and use it with an AM2 (BIOS update req.) or AM2+ motherboard. When AM3 comes, so does the Phenom II with DDR3 support (and HT3 support!). Time will well if the upgrade is worth it, I doubt it will be as big as the difference between Phenom I and II. In other words, might as well buy one now. AM3 is slated for Q3 this year anyway. On the other hand, rumours says Intel will drop the price, then C2Q is more bang for the buck than this AMD CPU.

    14. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually you are looking at this in the wrong way. The entire problem is that you are looking at the Phenom as though it's the critical portion of AMD design, which it's not. The Phenom II is part of the Dragon platform, which includes the 4000 series graphics and the 7 series chipset. When combined, the system can be configured for less than $500 or just under $700 with very high end parts. Once together, the AMD system can use Overdrive to hit 4ghz on air with very little effort. Tests have put them at 3.8ghz with the automated performance boosts. Now, not only does Intel not have a platform to match, but their chipset and graphics departments are still playing catchup. Once the AM3 systems hit the market Intel will be in a considerable amount of trouble staying competitive.... especially with the current voltage problems (DDR3 performance memory can burn up i7 chips).

      Also, do not forget, AMD manufacturing costs are dropping while Intel's are increasing. This is not a good trend to have when attempting to compete on prices. New i7 CPUs are entering the market at equal prices and staying high, while the very best AMD chip enters market at the lowest Intel price point and drops. It becomes very hard to justify spending several times more on an Intel system for a tiny performance difference, knowing that it might not even be DDR3 compatible.

    15. Re:Good... but... by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Cache size is an area where AMD has considerably lagged Intel for quite some time. I'd consider AMD's bumping up of cache size on the 45nm parts to be moreso evening out a competitive disadvantage they had for 2 years, rather than a desperate attempt to make a non-competitive product compete with an obviously superior one (a la P4 vs. K8).

      The Core 2 Quads have large amounts of beyond-L1 cache: 2 x 4M of L2 (or something 2 x 6M), so 8-12M total plus some inter-die communcation latency between the two L2s if you needed to go across the MCM to get a cacheline.

      The earlier 65nm Phenoms had 4 x 512k L2 + 2M L3, so a total of 4M of beyond-L1 cache plus the inter-core latency of accessing any of the other cores' L2 or the L3. That's half or less than that of the Core 2. That alone can mostly account for the clock-for-clock advantage that the Core 2 had over the Phenom. (There were other tweaks Intel put in the Core 2 which are great too...Core 2 is a good part...but doubling the effective cache size is a big deal.)

      Slapping the 6M L3 on the Phenom II helps even out that disadvantage.

    16. Re:Good... but... by KDR_11k · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you can't get fast enough hardware, try faster software.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    17. Re:Good... but... by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1

      Once the AM3 systems hit the market Intel will be in a considerable amount of trouble staying competitive.... especially with the current voltage problems (DDR3 performance memory can burn up i7 chips).

      I'm fairly sure there's no problem if your DDR3 memory actually follows the DDR3 standard.

    18. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Games notwithstanding on the home market, lots offices need machines to:

      Compile code
      Render 3d animation
      Edit HD video (or even decode it, try watching 1080p content on an 5+ year old machine)

      The masses have never cared about the performance king. They'll keep buying celerons with 128K cache.

    19. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The one thing that takes more speed than a five year old PC and that is digital video. HD-digital camcorders are now under $200. Transcoding video to put onto DVDs may become popular. If Blu Ray recordable disks become cheap then people may start making those at home.

      But even that may not need a fast CPU. I think you will see more and more video work off loaded to the GPU.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    20. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC.

      You're right, they're most likely dying for one, however...

    21. Re:Good... but... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm not denying that there are applications out there that can make good use of extra processing power, but only that they aren't really what most people use their computers for. I know some pretty young and tech-savvy people, and almost none of them do anything with video on their computers beyond occasional Netflix streaming.

      Camcorders aren't by any means rare, but they aren't all that incredibly common either that I'd expect it to drive the mass market. And that opinion isn't formed from any thought that camcorders are too expensive or difficult to operate, but rather that they're the sort of gadgets that people buy and don't really use as much as they expected to.

    22. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You may be right. The thing is that the flip camcorder is so cheap that they may soon be everywhere.
      Just wait until cellphones come with HD video.
      But yes cheap, simpler, and lower power use going to be the way of the future.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    23. Re:Good... but... by cyphercell · · Score: 1
      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    24. Re:Good... but... by naasking · · Score: 1

      The Atom is the right now the most interesting CPU around.

      I disagree. The Via Nano is far more interesting.

    25. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think an Opteron (or any number of them) is going to be faster than a Xeon when the Core2-based CPUs have trounced anything and everything AMD has released for almost 3 years now? They JUST NOW passed up the Q6600 which was release in December 2006.

      The low-end Core2s have trounced everything AMD had except the fastest AMD CPUs (which cost more). My GF's 2180 is still faster than over 50% of AMD's line and I bought it 5 months ago for $60.

      I think you've got delusions of grandeur. You won't be ripping any heads off. AMD has finally done something right for a chance, but they've got a long way to go to get back where they were in the Athlon vs P4 days.

    26. Re:Good... but... by athakur999 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The AM3 Phenom II's are supposed to be able to work in an AM2+ motherboard (and utilize DD2 memory). TechReport's review of the chip has some more details on this:

      http://techreport.com/articles.x/16147

      In one of the neater tricks we've seen along these lines, Socket AM3-capable Phenom II processors will, happily, be backward compatible with current Socket AM2+ motherboards and DDR2 memory.

      So AM2+ is still a viable socket for the future since AM3 processors will fit in. I wonder if the backwards compatability will work both ways - could an AM2+ processor be used in an AM3 motherboard?

      --
      "People that quote themselves in their signatures bother me" - athakur999
    27. Re:Good... but... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Just wait until cellphones come with HD video.

      Yeah, I know... but then again, of all the people with cameras in their phones today, I don't know many who actually make much use of them. There are people who take lots of pictures, but it always seems to me like the vast majority take a few pictures when they fist get their phone, mostly forget about them after a couple weeks, and remember they have a camera in their phone long enough to take a couple pictures every few months.

      And even then, they don't go home and do anything with those pictures. They just store them on their hard drive.

    28. Re:Good... but... by Lockblade · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...The Atom is the right now the most interesting CPU around...

      I really have to disagree with you there. I think the VIA Nano is a bit more interesting, as it basically beats the Atom into the ground with almost everything. Back on topic, I think that the above post was right; most people don't need a high-end computer. Even some of the mid-range to low-end computers might be a little much for some people. AMD should really go for the cheap side, making cheap, low-power processors to tide them over while they redesign their high-end chips to compete with I7.

    29. Re:Good... but... by Simulant · · Score: 1

      The thing really is though is that the Core2 and the X2 really are still "good enough". Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC

      Hear hear...

          There's no such thing as "future proof". Something better will always come along but right now, there's very little software aimed at consumers that doesn't run acceptably well on on ANY 2-3 Ghz CPU.
        If you care about future competition in the CPU market, you should be recommending AMD to your family and friends. They are cheaper and more than adequate.

      I recently picked up a 65nm, 3.1 Ghz Athlon X2 + Mobo for $166.00. I can run every FPS on the market at 1920x1200, most at max detail. Hell... if you're running at 1280x1024, a single core Athlon and a $100.00 video card (Think geforce 9600..) will work fine for most games. Why do I need a faster CPU right now? Bragging rights?

    30. Re:Good... but... by rwa2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I bought an AM2+ motherboard recently with a near bottom-of-the-line Athlon 64 X2 dual core. This is exactly the news I've been waiting for. In a few years I'll be able to double my cores and maybe modestly increase my CPU clockspeed from 2.2Ghz to maybe 2.8Ghz, hopefully while not increasing the TDP beyond 85W. Oh, and it would have been cheaper (and eventually faster) than buying a top of the line system now.

      AMD is perfect for the people like me who love saving a couple hundred bucks every few years by living just behind the bleeding edge. And if they weren't around to compete with Intel I doubt we'd see any progress from them. /had an AMD chip in each of my main computers (except laptops) since '97

    31. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Maybe I should have said Atom class CPUs which would include the Nano.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    32. Re:Good... but... by Fweeky · · Score: 3, Informative

      I wonder if the backwards compatability will work both ways - could an AM2+ processor be used in an AM3 motherboard?

      Nope, since they lack the DDR3 support in their memory controller.

    33. Re:Good... but... by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      ATI have a free GPU-accelerated video encoder which supports a range of formats. nVidia have one too, but it only supports H.264 and with a smaller range of options even for that, and it's not even free to use.

    34. Re:Good... but... by ak3ldama · · Score: 2, Funny

      Most people really are not dieing for a faster PC.

      You're right, they're most likely dying for one, however...

      No that was a typo. He meant to say: "Most people realy are not dieting for a faster PC.[/sarcasm]

      Get off our lawn.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    35. Re:Good... but... by greetings+programs · · Score: 1

      Hell, no, remember that in AMD chips the memory controller is located on the CPU itself.

      --
      Greetings, programs!
    36. Re:Good... but... by BorgHunter · · Score: 1

      could an AM2+ processor be used in an AM3 motherboard?

      Nope. The AM2+s lack the DDR3 memory controller.

      --
      "Excuse me, did you say 'Trekker'? The word is 'Trekkie.' I should know; I created them." -- Gene Roddenberry
    37. Re:Good... but... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Meh. Atom.

      The biggest detractor to the Atom right now is the integrated Intel video. It has never, ever worked well - or at least since i810 came around. By "well" I don't mean "good performance" I mean "works without glitches, consistently" - on either Windows or Linux.

      And then the fact that the latest Intel graphics are slow as tar and work all that well - IE, not even as well as a 5+year-old Nvidia mid-range graphic card (ti4200).

      The most evident performance increase I've seen in Desktops, when the performance to be gained is marginal and the systems are pretty well constrained (size, space, heat. etc) has been to upgrade the video card or hard drive (if things are "appearing" slow). At least in Linux, that tends to make things snappy and responsive. An AMD/ATI mobile platform would be, IMO, greatly appreciated over the Intel Atom.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    38. Re:Good... but... by Targon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Phenom 2 is faster clock for clock compared to the Phenom 1.

      Phenom 2 when the socket AM3 version is released will be compatible with both socket AM2+ as well as socket AM3 motherboards. Obviously, the older Phenom and this first set of Phenom 2 processors will be DDR2 only parts, so putting them in an environment where DDR3 memory will be used just will not work.

      As far as prices go, the current pricing is on the initial batch, and going forward, AMD has at least a bit more room to increase clock speeds. As others have said as well, you can make a VERY cheap AMD based system with an AMD 790GX chipset and one of these machines. Just slap a hard drive in the machine, some cheap DDR 2 memory, and a hard drive, and you are set. Intel, no matter that you may be able to throw a cheap machine together, can't provide a decent quality graphics chip, so you MUST go with an NVIDIA chipset board with integrated graphics on the Intel side if you want to go for "low cost systems". Look at the system prices for AMD vs. Intel at this lower price point, and AMD wins.

    39. Re:Good... but... by dirtyhippie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Watching divx content really is enough to make performance matter -- an atom, for example, just can't keep up compared to a "fuller" CPU.

    40. Re:Good... but... by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      The new phenom IIs have ddr3 support despite being am2+ (unless they are amd3?), so the last generation of am2+ processors are expected to work in am3.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    41. Re:Good... but... by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      Intel slapped tons of cache on their P4s and Core 2s because it was an effective way of masking the poor memory access speeds (due to the lack of an integrated memory controller). For AMD, the extra cache made basically no difference in performance, so it was a waste to add it. Go back and compare the original Athlon X2 4200+ (2.2 Ghz, 512K L2 cache per core) with the 4400+ (2.2 Ghz, 1M L2 cache per core), you'll notice there's basically no performance difference, and the 1M cache models were promptly dropped.

    42. Re:Good... but... by LeDopore · · Score: 1

      It's not a matter of composing email in 4 ms instead of 20 ms. It's that entirely new functions will drive adoption.

      Examples? Apple just added face recognition to iPhoto and image stabilization to iMovie. Lots of folks are starting to do video editing. Dictation (useful when you have carpal tunnel) performance can be improved a bit with more clock cycles.

      As long as engineers build faster chips, software and systems geeks will find a way to add new (useful or flashy) features that the public wants.

      --
      Expected time to finish is 1 hour and 60 minutes.
    43. Re:Good... but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Compile code? Do it all the the time with a code base of over 100k lines. Works fine on even a single core P4. Developers don't often do a make clean. You only compile the objects, functions, libraries... what ever that has changed.
      Render 3d animations??? Lots?... Outside of CAD shops who? Sure a few but not a lot.
      Edit HD video??? Again not a lot.
      Again I said MOST people. Your cases are edge at best.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    44. Re:Good... but... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      However, changing the game to incorporate Radeon-style parallel pipelines is a different story.

      Bingo! What AMD really needs is a Radeon co-processor that sits in an AM3 socket and talks to the rest of the system over HyperTransport. I sure as heck would go buy me a dual-socket board for that, and a Phenom 2 to go with it!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    45. Re:Good... but... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      As long as engineers build faster chips, software and systems geeks will find a way to add new (useful or flashy) features that the public wants.

      Well that's long been the assumption, since it has largely been the case so far, but wonder whether we've seen a new function that will really drive adoption. You mention movie editing and dictation, but my question would be, what percentage of the computer-using user-base will actually use those features?

      Maybe it will be a large percentage, but I don't think so. At least not as large a percentage as those who use e-mail or those who have their music collection on their computers. In spite of all the hype around voice recognition, keyboard remain an incredibly efficient input mechanism. Videos-- I know lots of people with digital cameras that do video, and a lot of those people barely use those digital cameras for still frame pictures; none use them for video.

      I just think most people that I meet and talk to and support aren't really using their computer to be creative, and so video editing probably won't be the thing. Most people are just using them to organize things, which doesn't require all that much processing power. But then again, the YouTube generation is still up and coming. Who knows?

      Speaking of face recognition, I could see a certain level of AI being the "function" that drives adoption. Not AI like the computer talks to you, but where it's able to search for things better, interpret what you're trying to do and help you, etc. Things like the facial recognition, but like what if iPhoto could interpret lots of things about your photos? Like you somehow input, "I'm looking for a picture of my brother-- it's a bright photo where he's wearing a green shirt, and I think it's at Disneyland." (though not necessarily in such natural language) And then the computer comes back and says (basically), "Well I found a picture with of your brother wearing a red shirt in Disneyland, but I also found this picture of him wearing a green shirt at Six Flags." Or whatever.

      That might not be a great example, but I guess my point is that most people don't really use their computers to make media as much as they use it to consume media or to organize their own data. One of the problems that everyone sees coming is that since we're accruing so much data as we go, it's going to get harder and harder to sort through it all. One feature that I think can still be improved (even though it has been improved over the past few years) is being able to sort through that stuff, automatically attach metadata and tags, back it up and archive it, and do it all intelligently so you don't end up with a big mess.

      But even that-- I don't know how much processor that will take.

    46. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of people will want an i7 because it is the latest and greatest, and then they will want to extact every bit of performance they can from that i7. In that quest they will also want high performance (or non-standard) RAM. Tell them they can't have it, and their only option is to avoid the platform and look for something that will let them use it. No doubt Intel will fix the problems if they start to lose some market share, of course any loss of market share lets AMD get it's foot firmly back in the door.

    47. Re:Good... but... by this+great+guy · · Score: 1

      Intel doesn't have to do any innovation at all to beat these chips, all it has to do is drop the prices on current Core 2 quads

      And what makes you think only Intel can drop prices ? The numerous price wars of the past prove that the 2 processor manufactures tend to be very reactive to each other's price changes.

      Also, while it is true that Core 2 is overall somewhat faster than Phenom II on a per-clock basis, as of today Phenom II is faster than Core 2 on a per-dollar basis for CPUs under $300. That's the only thing that matters to most buyers because this price range represents 90+% of the market. Of course it would be nice if AMD could compete in the high-end market, but it's pretty obvious that AMD made a good decision to outperform Intel in that end of the market.

    48. Re:Good... but... by IorDMUX · · Score: 1

      For a good, low power processor, you need to either have a very innovative, low-power design, or have a very high-tech process that can produce low-power circuits.

      Intel has the latter, as their fabs are pretty much the best in the world, hence the success of the Atom. On the other hand are CPU's like the Qualcomm Snapdragon, which, though it uses a less cutting edge technology, it has a design that is the result of over a decade of low-power design. No company, at present, has both the design and the tech. (Thankfully. Otherwise, competition could vanish quickly.)

      So I think [as does AMD] that it's best that AMD, whose innovations are in the fairly different world of high-performance and clock-by-clock optimization, stick with competing against Intel on the desktop/server/non-ultra-mobile-laptop market. I hope the best for AMD in this market... not out of any fanboy-ism, but because, next time I build myself a gaming computer, I still want a choice of processors.

      --
      >> Standing on head makes smile of frown, but rest of face also upside down.
    49. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really have to disagree with you there. I think the VIA Nano is a bit more interesting, as it basically beats the Atom into the ground with almost everything.

      That review you linked to? It compared a 2W TDP 1.6 GHz Atom to a 25.0W TDP 1.8 GHz Nano. Don't be fooled by the total system power consumption measured in the review. Intel's desktop Atom boards use a very old chipset which consumes ~25W by itself, which distorts the results. When paired with a more modern low power chipset, the Atom is simply in a different league. Which is why you see tons of Atom netbooks and zero Nano netbooks. (The slowest Nano is 1.0 GHz 5W TDP, but that's still more power than the fastest Atom, and at that speed it'll be slower than said Atom.)

      The other hidden factor the review doesn't talk about is that Atom has a 24.2mm^2 die, while Nano is about 2.5x as large at 63.3mm^2. Combine the tiny die with Intel's legendarily efficient manufacturing process and you get something which Intel can offer at really low prices while still making a nice profit margin.

      Right now, Nano is in trouble because VIA hasn't found a niche where the product works well. Atom is clearly better for ultra low power and low cost systems where performance is not an issue. Low end derivatives of Athlon 64 and Core 2 are far faster when budgeting ~20-30W for the CPU, and there isn't much room for VIA to undercut their prices. VIA has to find customers who want a (relatively) low performance part with (relatively) high power consumption for that performance.

    50. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got to say, that's more about memory and hard drive space. Video transcoding is not time sensitive like gaming is. If you could somehow shoe-horn 4 GB of memory and a 1 TB hard drive into a PIII, it would do fine. As long as you can start the process before bed and have it done by the time you get up in the morning, it's all good.

      Now, if you want to transcode video AND browse the web and play a game and check email at the same time, that's a different story.

    51. Re:Good... but... by BikeHelmet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not even games require a great CPU, anymore. Some of the most innovative ones(Like World of Goo or Left4Dead) will run on old systems, like a 2ghz Athlon XP from 2002/2003. :P Faster CPUs are for... bragging rights? Encoding stuff?

      More memory is for multitasking - you can never have enough memory! I'm amazed that I can hit 1GB memory usage when my OS and background software only consumes ~150MB. A year ago that wasn't the case, but now I just have more stuff running...

      I think the next must have computer hardware will be high performance SSDs. That'll boost responsiveness more than a faster CPU can. People will become accustomed to their games loading instantly, and not having lag spikes. It's already been proven that a high end SSD can take the min FPS in a game like Crysis from the low 10's to the high 20's - that's more than the jump from Dual-core to Quad-core, or 8800GTX to GTX260.

      http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3403&p=14

      We already have an abundance of CPU power. The next jumps will definitely be in IO/storage performance, power consumption, and size.

      It makes me wonder if ARM can wedge its way into the netbook market - power consumption is not a strength of x86.

    52. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once together, the AMD system can use Overdrive to hit 4ghz on air with very little effort. Tests have put them at 3.8ghz with the automated performance boosts.

      Overclocked speeds are meaningless.

      No, really. You need to stop having overclocker myopia. OC will never drive most of the market, no matter how easy it is.

      DDR3 performance memory can burn up i7 chips

      More overclocker myopia. "Performance memory" doesn't do that to Core i7. Running i7's memory interface at voltages over the limits defined by the JEDEC spec for DDR3 does. So you buy memory which actually complies to the DDR3 spec, rather than goofy OC memory which requires heatsinks and overvoltaging to even function. Problem solved.

      Also, do not forget, AMD manufacturing costs are dropping while Intel's are increasing. This is not a good trend to have when attempting to compete on prices.

      Say whaaaaaaaat? I'd like to see you even try to defend this absurd statement. Even if it were true that AMD's costs were decreasing and Intel's increasing (which it is not, they're likely both decreasing), Intel has historically held a huge advantage in manufacturing cost for high performance logic CMOS, one so large that it would take a long time to actually reach a point where anything crossed over.

      Keep in mind that a major reason for this is simply size advantage. Economies of scale are huge in the semiconductor industry. AMD's costs will likely never be lower than Intel's unless AMD manages to attain much higher market share.

      New i7 CPUs are entering the market at equal prices and staying high, while the very best AMD chip enters market at the lowest Intel price point and drops.

      Say whaaaaaaaaaaaat? again. New i7 CPUs are entering the market at prices consistent with their performance, which is very good. In fact, Intel's prices for the CPU itself are very reasonable. The only thing making i7 systems expensive right now is the high price of the motherboards and DDR3 RAM.

      New AMD chips are entering at midrange (not lowest) Intel price points, carefully chosen to be in-line with the Intel CPUs which offer equivalent performance. For example, the 3.0 GHz Phenom II benchmarks roughly between the 2.4 and 2.66 GHz 45nm Core 2 Quad, and AMD has priced it to fall roughly between those two Intel CPUs.

      That's not a good thing for AMD. Just the opposite. AMD's pricing is being dictated by Intel's, and because they have no parts which can compete with Intel's high end parts, AMD has no access to the high profit margin part of the market. Worse yet, it probably costs AMD significantly more to make a Phenom II than it costs Intel to make a Core 2 Quad. (The total die area is larger, and it's one huge die instead of two small die, which guarantees that AMD has to scrap more die due to defects.)

      It becomes very hard to justify spending several times more on an Intel system for a tiny performance difference, knowing that it might not even be DDR3 compatible.

      "Might not even be DDR3 compatible"? Pure fanwankery.

    53. Re:Good... but... by Arterion · · Score: 1

      Because it's cheaper to buy a faster chip than it is to hire a programmer who can write more efficient code. I don't think that will change soon.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    54. Re:Good... but... by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Intel slapped tons of cache on their P4s and Core 2s because it was an effective way of masking the poor memory access speeds (due to the lack of an integrated memory controller).

      All cache can possibly do is mask memory access speeds. Intel might have had more of a need to mask the memory access speeds with P4 and Core 2, but that doesn't mean that they somehow gain less of an advantage by throwing tons of it on there.

      I also have a feeling AMD saw that their performance with a small cache + IMC was great compared to P4, and so left it small because it obviously costs less to put less cache on the die (less area, less defects, more die per wafer, etc.).

      For AMD, the extra cache made basically no difference in performance, so it was a waste to add it.

      No. Even with the DRAM controller on-die, L2 cache is faster, by many, many clock cycles. How much that matters obviously depends on the dataset and code size you're working with, but to say that there was no performance difference is flat-out wrong.

      the 1M cache models were promptly dropped.

      You must be referring to AMD not making a 65nm Athlon64 (the "Brisbane" core) with 1M after they made plenty of 90nm parts with 1M. I don't know the reasons for that, but it certainly had nothing to do with a lack of performance gain from more cache. It might have been lack of demand for that extra performance on what amount to a desktop-only part, since they never sold Brisbanes as Opterons, only as Athlons. Or something to that effect.

    55. Re:Good... but... by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      From what I've read, the current Phenom II's are limited to DDR2 and AM2+; the AM2+/AM3 DDR2/DDR3 supporting ones are due next month.

    56. Re:Good... but... by basicio · · Score: 1

      Very true. I use a Shuttle KPC with a 1.8GHz Celeron and 1GB of RAM for a good deal of my everyday computing. The only times I notice slowdowns are when I'm loading websites with flash. (And I notice slowdowns with flash on my laptop, too, and that has a Core 2 Duo at 2.4GHz.)

    57. Re:Good... but... by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      Nobody? Seriously, I'm quitting Slashdot any day now.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    58. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --
      All spelling and grammar errors are intentional. Grammar Nazis' need entertainment.

      You do know, don't you, that the apostrophe in "Nazis" is incorrect, don't you? It is a simple plural, not a possessive, so "Nazis" is correct, not "Nazis'".

      --One of the Grammar Green Berets

    59. Re:Good... but... by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      that's one of the reasons why they bought ATI

    60. Re:Good... but... by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      Here's a comparison between the Toledo Athlon X2 4600+, 4400+ and 4200+. You'll note that in most cases the performance boost from 4200->4400 is negligible (~1% or less), while the jump from 4200 (or 4400) to 4600 is typically ~10%, as would be expected from the clock speed boost. Given that the extra cache is expensive (a lot more than an extra 1%, too), I don't blame them for dropping it.

      When the Athlon X2s came out (and before the Core 2s came out), I researched all of this and ended up buying a 4200+, noting that the 4400+ was worth basically no extra performance (but cost $100 more at the time), which is why I know this off the top of my head.

    61. Re:Good... but... by turing_m · · Score: 1

      MP3s were the last one, and IIRC that's been commonplace for almost a decade now.

      HD video is newer, but your point is still good. The main area that CPUs (and GPUs) need to improve (from the perspective of most users) is in power consumption, as this brings silence and lower costs. I can see LCD monitors getting bigger - 30-40 inch monitors for a similar price per unit area as 22 inch monitors would sell well. I can see getting games to run at decent FPS at higher resolutions will give some more legs to GPU speed increases. Someone else mentioned SSD, they will be huge and everyone will be wanting to buy one to put their OS and program files on.

      Other than that, we are waiting on a killer app. A bloated but not more functional OS will only drive people to Linux.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    62. Re:Good... but... by wild_berry · · Score: 1

      A totally different story: they would need to make it very easy for developer to use the new co-processor, and to get some community buzz going for the new hardware, and then to have some showcase examples of the new setup.

      You've got to admit that it would be nothing more than a cool toy if you can't do any real work with it.

    63. Re:Good... but... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I would assume they'd write a Direct3D/OpenGL driver for it, just like they do with their graphics cards. That's what it is: a graphics card without the card. I would also hope that they'd provide an OpenCL compiler too, of course.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    64. Re:Good... but... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I'm waiting for them to finally make it.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    65. Re:Good... but... by duguk · · Score: 1
      To confirm from (I can't believe I'm saying this...) Wikipedia, since the idea seems kinda backwards at first:

      AMD has confirmed that AM3 processors will work on some AM2 motherboards. However, AM2/2+ processors will not work on AM3 motherboards because AM2 processors lack the DDR3 memory controller. Also, two extra pins and the change in contact placement

    66. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      let's just forget the bandwidth. you're comparing apples and oranges here. the core i7 is a big die shrink compared to the 65nm and 45nm chips AMD's selling to profit off of the last of their old lines. Let's wait and see how the hammers fall when they starting pushing out their 32nm chips next spring before we decide who really has a better chip. With fusion assisting and many apps starting to utilize gpu/cpu hybrid code the i7's may end up puking their guts in comparison. nobody knows for sure at this point because both AMD and Intel are playing things tight to the chest.

      This battle will never end, but that's how marketing strategies work. It's the people who choose a brand rather than the chip that they need for what they'll use it for that need a good lump on the head.

      It's not about raw performance, it's performance per dollar for your use.

    67. Re:Good... but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DV strains the I/O as well as the processor. At least in my limited experience with DV and rendering cinelerra on a double 1.5ghz core 2 duo.

    68. Re:Good... but... by wild_berry · · Score: 1

      I would argue that, without both a graphics driver and data processing libraries, it's a toy. With only the graphics driver, it should be in a position to kickstart HD video on netbooks (yawn). With only a data processing driver, it's relegated to AMD's homeland in the server space (and may well get them more of that market). With both, it fills a gap in the middle with the workstation market and data visualisation, and so can hit all three targets (netbook/workstation/server).

      The discussion's moot: AMD will do it because a pundit on the Internet said they should do it...

    69. Re:Good... but... by W-type · · Score: 1

      I agree people don't really need computers as fast as a overpriced I7.A Core2 and X2 is more than what they need. Most gamers care about more power and high benchmarks. This is a game big companies play with people to suck you in going from platform to platform tring to be the top dog

  7. Core i7? by Gizzmonic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What about the IBM PowerPC 980?

    --
    (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  8. Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

    Since I'd hate to go back to the bad old days, before the megahertz wars, when processors were expensive. For desktop/low-end workstation use, the phenom IIs seem to be merely ok, price competitive with the chips intel currently has down there; but not in a position to beat the i7s. Where these new cores will be quite interesting, though, is in 4 socket and higher configurations. Even with substantially inferior core designs, AMD has been stomping Intel in the 4+ socket area, since hypertransport is markedly superior. With actually competitive cores, AMD should find 4+ sockets to be a party, at least until Intel gets quickpath stuff ramped up.

    1. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      For desktop/low-end workstation use, the phenom IIs seem to be merely ok

      I don't get such comparisons, for really low-end stuff like that wouldn't a P3 1 GHz be enough to?

      If we are speaking the web with multiple tabs I guess not since browsers kill my C2D 2.2 GHz 4 GB ram MBP.

    2. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by Buzz_Light · · Score: 1

      If we are speaking the web with multiple tabs I guess not since browsers kill my C2D 2.2 GHz 4 GB ram MBP.

      Try not running Vista.

    3. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say Flash is to blame here. It runs equally bad on every hardware.

    4. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      I don't get such comparisons, for really low-end stuff like that wouldn't a P3 1 GHz be enough to?

      For the past 2 years, I would consider the purchase of any single-core CPUs to be "penny-wise pound-foolish". Typically, you can get a dual-core CPU for only a few dollars more, and you end up with a much more responsive machine.

      Our low-end work desktops have all been dual-core X2s, usually a 45W design where possible. The power savings alone from the energy efficient X2s pays for the extra CPU cost. The responsiveness of a dual-core system also pays off in improved productivity. Plus a 45W machine tends to be very quiet, even with the OEM heatsink/fan.

      We switched to dual-core as soon as dual-core CPUs dropped below $200 (a few years ago now). At that point in time, AMD X2s were the only inexpensive dual-core choice, with the bonus that they were 64bit capable. So we got better performance and a bit of future-proofing.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    5. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MPB: Mac Power Book

    6. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      It probably runs worse on macs, but the thing is I have this thing there I need to allow plugins to run, so flash shouldn't run unless I accept should they?

      So I don't really get it. It's insane. I knew Safari did it but today I closed it and ran firefox with just 30+ tabs and it maxed my CPU and increased it's temp to 77 C anyway. Good thing I'm not trying to make someone pregnant or have a gf.

    7. Re:Nice to see AMD doing somewhat better... by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Typically, you can get a dual-core CPU for only a few dollars more, and you end up with a much more responsive machine.

      That depends. I have here a work laptop (Dell Latitude D820) with Intel chipset and a Core Duo processor, and it sucks. Responsiveness goes out the window when the load average hits 2.5. My private laptop is much less powerful, a simple PIIIM 900 on an Intel chipset, and it stays responsive under load.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  9. Re:Did you ever notice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you say is true, but ultimately it is irrelevant. Linux will never be ready for the desktop.

  10. it would be cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..if the the heatspreader on these CPUs was black with silver writing.

  11. 125 watt only? by sricetx · · Score: 1

    Does anybody know if there are plans for 95 watt Phenom IIs? It looks like the first models are 125 watt only (and I just got a AM2+ motherboard that only supports the 95W Phenoms).

    1. Re:125 watt only? by Atriqus · · Score: 3, Informative

      The later AM3s will have 95w x4's in feburary. Check your board's product page if they plan on supporting it for that model.

      --
      Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
    2. Re:125 watt only? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/464/1049464/phenom-ii-athlon-x4-oh-my

      If the above is correct, the AM3 parts should do the trick for you in about a month.

    3. Re:125 watt only? by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      I'm hoping more for a quad-core CPU that is a 45W TDP and is under $100. All of the current quad-core CPUs out there are 95-125W (including Intel's) and are $130-$200.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    4. Re:125 watt only? by MassEnergySpaceTime · · Score: 1

      Me too. I'm waiting for the rumored Athlon X4 at 45W TDP. It's supposed to come out in the 2nd qtr of this year. I think it would make a perfect upgrade for my Athlon X2 4850e. As for the price tag, the 65W 9350e has been sitting on Newegg at about the same price as the 125W 9950, so it might take a while before the 45W X4 hit the $100 mark.

      --
      Respect the laws of physics, for the laws of physics have no respect for you.
    5. Re:125 watt only? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm hoping more for a quad-core CPU that is a 45W TDP and is under $100. All of the current quad-core CPUs out there are 95-125W (including Intel's) and are $130-$200.

      won't happen for a while, at least not officially. A 95w one can probably get pretty close to 45w though if you reduce the core voltage. The Phenom II overclocks like crazy(the only limitation is heat up until 7ghz) which means they should also be able to run at low voltage on stock speed.

      I bought a 65W Athlon X2 and have lowered the voltage to the point where it uses less electricity than a 45W model. My intention has always been to purchase a Phenom II once I can find a cheap, efficient AM3 one.

    6. Re:125 watt only? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm hoping more for a quad-core CPU that is a 45W TDP and is under $100. All of the current quad-core CPUs out there are 95-125W (including Intel's) and are $130-$200.

      The closest thing currently on the market is the Phenom 9350e. It's a 65W quad-core and goes for €150 around here, I'm guessing it's at a comparable price in the US. This processor is still produced on 65nm, so the new 45nm process should make producing these chips even easier.

      I'm waiting for such a processor as well, to replace the X2 that's currently powering my HTPC/gaming rig.

  12. A half truth by MC68040 · · Score: 0

    People that RTFA will realize that AMD's new CPU's only match the most current bottom-line Intel quad core cpu's.

    Saying that, amd's offering does give you a good value for money and is in some cases significantly cheaper than Intel's offering. Adding to that fact is amd's discreet graphic offerings which are far superior to intel's offerings.

    I imagine we'll see a lot of these amd chips and graphic offerings combined on the "budget" performance systems which is a good thing; they provide better performance (especially graphics-wise) than existing offerings in the same range :)

    1. Re:A half truth by sholsinger · · Score: 1

      [...]Adding to that fact is amd's discreet graphic offerings which are far superior to intel's offerings.[...]

      Unless you're using GNU/Linux. The drivers just aren't quite up to snuff yet.

    2. Re:A half truth by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

      Hard[OCP] has had one of the best writeups so far imo. Admittedly they compare a Phenom II to a top of the line Core2 and i7 in that article, but that's only so they can compare the cores clock for clock which isn't feasable using the cheaper intel parts as an unlocked multiplier is required.

      Anyhoo, the point is that Phenom II is, clock for clock, slower than Core2. Given how cheap and overclockable a Q6600 w/DDR2 is then it's hard to justify Phenom II for enthusiast purposes - tho I suppose when that reality hits the market retailers will start doing deep discounts and I expect good deals will appear.

      What I'd love is, given the above facts, a proper overclocking competition article between a Q6600 or similar Core2 and the new Phenom IIs. The unlocked Phenom II can be had for about £140 here in the UK so if it generally overclocks well then it may be able to whoop Core2s' arse!

      --
      Nick
    3. Re:A half truth by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

      Is that still true? This is one of those areas where I've read conflicting word-of-post, some people say they're still not quite as good as the Nvidia drivers and others say they're OK for games.

      --
      Nick
  13. Re:Did you ever notice by somersault · · Score: 5, Funny

    So you didn't notice how you can't spell "Islamo-Communist mental case" without I n t e l then?

    --
    which is totally what she said
  14. Power Consumption by JoeSixpack00 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If AMD wants to improve sales they should do what they did for the X2 line: lower power consumption. I don't care what any of the "experts" say - the moment I saw the whopping 130w listed next to the i7 920 I immediately decided I didn't want one. The Athlon 4850e already has the crown on the dual core front, so if they can manage a respectable 95w quad core, AMD could corner the efficiency market. I know they had to release this chip to generate revenue, but I'd hoping that low power quad is in their future plans.

    On another note, it's quite funny to see such high power requirements for the new intels. Am I the only person who remembers AMD getting ridiculed about the Phenoms power consumption? Now that intel has finally released a true quad core chip, their power consumption is the same or more than AMDs. Granted that does nothing about the performance gap, but at least it quiets the power critics.

    1. Re:Power Consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they wouldn't be corning anything. A Q9550 is already a 95w quad-core. Not only that but something like a Q9550 beats the crap out of even the latest AMD clock-for-clock.

    2. Re:Power Consumption by EvilSheep · · Score: 1

      You are not the only one.

      The spec that matters most to me is the idle time power. The phenom processors have tended to be on the high side.

      Tom's hardware has an interesting commentary on this in its review. The i7 processor has a much lower power consumption at idle. However, the power consumption of an intel system as a whole is much higher.

      The AMD Phenom II contribution to the ring seems to be an improvement in this respect, with lower idle power than ye olde phenom.

      http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/phenom-ii-940,2114.html

      --
      ---
    3. Re:Power Consumption by steveha · · Score: 1

      the moment I saw the whopping 130w listed next to the i7 920 I immediately decided I didn't want one.

      And don't forget -- this is an Intel power rating, which means "typical use". I have a computer with an AMD Phenom 9850, and that's rated at 120W, but that's worst case, not typical. In actual use the computer has been quiet and cool. (I ought to try recompiling the Linux kernel on all four cores or something.)

      http://www.silentpcreview.com/article169-page3.html

      AMD could corner the efficiency market.

      Intel is selling far more CPUs than AMD can even make, and they have the top absolute performance, but AMD is selling plenty of Opterons into data centers because AMD does well on performance/power ratio. AMD is also selling some CPU chips with a maximum heat dissipation of 45W. AMD is already working on cornering the efficiency market.

      http://enterprise.amd.com/us-en/AMD-Business/Technology-Home/Power-Management.aspx
      http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3003

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    4. Re:Power Consumption by 0123456 · · Score: 0

      "And don't forget -- this is an Intel power rating, which means "typical use"."

      Uh, isn't that backwards? Unless something's changed recently I believe the Intel TDP _is_ 'worst case', whereas AMDs figures are for 'typical use'.

    5. Re:Power Consumption by SST-206 · · Score: 1

      No, read the SilentPCReview article linked to above. Intel=typical, AMD=maximum.

      --
      Co-operation beats competition
    6. Re:Power Consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why did you get modded Informative for posting incorrect information with no supporting references? See the link provided... here, I'll even repeat it for you right here:

      http://www.silentpcreview.com/article169-page3.html

    7. Re:Power Consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, go read i7 datasheet for current consumption, you'll find that it can suck up to about 200W in the worst case.

      This is TDP "thermal design power" in the sense that it will be hard to go above 130W for a significant amount of time.

      Really both AMD and Intel have been playing games in this area, also Intel has been slightly more cheating IMO.

      Specifications for ARM/MIPS/PPC CPUs are typically worst case for the power supply designer; specifically in the PPC area, the PASemi chips were great, it was really 25W max, with 2 cores running at 2GHz, dual channel DDR2 at 667 or 800 MHz at full stream, and all the I/O (PCIe x16+2*10Gb/s Ethernet) lines used and internal auxiliary engines running (encryption and TCP offload for the Ethernet interfaces). Of course this is with ECC memory (not that it does increase much but that's a few more lines to control).

      Now what will Apple do with PASemi's excellent design team, I don't know. But I really doubt that Dobberpuhl and co would only work on SoC for IPods and Iphones.

    8. Re:Power Consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really both AMD and Intel have been playing games in this area, also Intel has been slightly more cheating IMO.

      I'm curious what games AMD has played in this area. Everything I have read online says that AMD's TDP number really does represent a max... can you post a reference explaining why you said this?

    9. Re:Power Consumption by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      It should be kept in mind that
      \
      A) AMD rates its TDW differently, a 125 AMD rating, and a 95 intel rating, are close to the same power consumption.

      B) AMD shaves power off the system board, since the memory controller is on the chip.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    10. Re:Power Consumption by msroadkill612 · · Score: 1

      re "130w listed next to the i7 920" - exactly. intel have been slagging off phenoms power consumption, but now they have mimiced AMDs innovative onboard memory controller, guess what happens to their power consumption as well?

    11. Re:Power Consumption by toddestan · · Score: 1

      B) AMD shaves power off the system board, since the memory controller is on the chip.

      To be fair, that's also the case now with the Core i7.

    12. Re:Power Consumption by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      Sweet, need to take a second look at them.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
  15. AMD is back????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see all these articles and reviews suggesting that AMD is somehow "back" in the game now, and that is totally misleading.

    This would be like suggesting that Intel was back when they released the Prescott. This new processor can barely beat Core 2's that have been out for a year or longer.

    AMD needs to create a new architecture before they will be back in the game.

    The prices of a Corei7 platform are going down fast and even right now it is only a 100-150 dollars more expensive to go Core i7 compared to a new Phenom 2, and core i7's completely blow the Phenom 2 out of the water.

    AMD is not back at all, if anything they're falling further behind.

    1. Re:AMD is back????? by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      I disagree. AMD is in an ok position, not great obviously, but their platform is competitive. The Core i7 is a better processor than the Phenom II, but I don't expect its price to come down any time soon. Intel will milk the high margins for as long as they can and sell old Core 2 quads to consumers for at least this year.

      Given the choice between a Core 2 Quad and a Phenom II, you should pick the Phenom. No question about it. The Core 2 quad has a split cache so multithreaded performance is crap. The cores have to transfer data through the slow memory interface, which limits parallel speedup in a lot of cases. This wasn't really an issue when Intel released the processor, but in the near future it will be a serious issue because the parallel software is coming.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
  16. Re:Did you ever notice by RaceCarDriver · · Score: 1

    So you didn't notice how you can't spell "Islamo-Communist mental case" without I n t e l then?

    Rock on!

  17. Port one by Lord+Byron+II · · Score: 1

    What is "port one"?

  18. Re:Did you ever notice by IMightB · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Until their Leaders stop acting like spoiled 5 year olds, the only thing we can do is laugh...

  19. Again, Intel optimised code benchmarks on AMD??? by GNUPublicLicense · · Score: 1, Informative

    Again it seems that the benchmarks are running Intel Optimized code on AMD...

  20. Re:Did you ever notice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How dare you, dagnabbit! AMD is a Texan company, just like our President and his daddy, and not from some commie/hippy/homosexual loving disneyland state like intel.

  21. Not MSI by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

    most of MSI's mobo aren't getting an update that will allow the use of am2+, which pisses me off because I bought that board with plans to upgrade to a AM2+ chip

    1. Re:Not MSI by WaroDaBeast · · Score: 1

      Teeell me about it. When I bought my motherboard -- a DFI Lanparty UT NF590 SLI-M2R/G --, I thought I'd upgrade my CPU later on. Nah, the only interesting CPU for me is the 65W 5600+, but since it only has half the amount of L2 cache compared to its 89W counterpart (which is what I have), I have no choice but to keep the same CPU.

      I wish I could say I won't buy DFI again, but they're not sold here -- I got mine in the States.

      --
      "The body may heal, but the mind is not always so resilient." -- Deus Ex: Human Revolution
  22. Or their own in-house compiler... by mosel-saar-ruwer · · Score: 1


    Interestingly, the review mentions the new Phenoms have 758 million transistors which means they have about 27 million more transistors than Nehalem... but Nehalem at 2.66 Ghz is easily beating a Phenom at 3.0Ghz.

    The other obvious problem is that pretty much every compiler on the market [especially the Intel C/C++ compiler] is optimized for the Intel circuitry as opposed to the AMD circuitry - i.e. most compilers probably aren't even aware of the functionality of those excess 27 million transistors.

    I can't for the life of me understand why AMD couldn't come up with $10 or $15 or $20 million to fund their own in-house compiler - for instance, it seems like there was a time when they could have scooped up Metrowerks from Motorola for pennies on the dollar.

    Until there's a compiler which truly understands the AMD circuitry, I don't see how anyone can know [definitively] the upper bounds of the capabilities of the AMD CPUs.

    PS: And as AMD tightens up the integration of their Opteron CPU circuitry with their ATI GPU circuitry [it can't be all that long now until they're both just isolated, disparate cores on the same multi-core matrix, and maybe even completely integrated into the very same core], it seems to me that having an in-house compiler - which is very tightly integrated with the circuitry - will be of paramount importance.

    In all honesty, I often wonder if maybe the Intel C/C++ compiler team is really the secret ace up Intel's sleeve which does the most important work in distinguishing them from AMD.

    1. Re:Or their own in-house compiler... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other obvious problem is that pretty much every compiler on the market [especially the Intel C/C++ compiler] is optimized for the Intel circuitry as opposed to the AMD circuitry - i.e. most compilers probably aren't even aware of the functionality of those excess 27 million transistors.

      There are very few compilers that matter nowadays. They are intel, Microsoft and gcc. gcc has known about AMD CPUs for years now, so it's not an issue.

      People who buy or steal software get stuff compiled by Microsoft's compiler. The rest of us use gcc, and if we're worried about performance, we recompile with different compiler switches for our own machines.

      Other compilers, such as Sun's, are for niche markets, like intel's compilers.

    2. Re:Or their own in-house compiler... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other obvious problem is that pretty much every compiler on the market [especially the Intel C/C++ compiler] is optimized for the Intel circuitry as opposed to the AMD circuitry - i.e. most compilers probably aren't even aware of the functionality of those excess 27 million transistors.

      Compilers don't know about the individual transistors in any CPU, for the simple reason that the CPU doesn't expose functionality on that level. Compilers know about instructions. Good optimizing compilers may have some notion about how to choose and schedule instructions for a given variant of a target instruction set architecture.

      Are there sometimes instructions unique to AMD? Yeah. Does this tend to matter much to overall performance? No. In fact, relatively little shipping code is compiled by Intel's compiler. Far more of it is compiled by Microsoft's compilers and GCC.

      You have to flip your argument on its head. Ultimately the merit of an x86 CPU design is how well it runs the code it can expect to encounter in the real world. It may have some interesting new extensions, but it won't sink or swim based on them: widespread adoption of any new instructions tends to be driven by what software developers can count on. For example, we didn't see widespread use of SSE2 until CPUs without it became obsolete. And AMD scored a home run with Athlon 64 not because of the 64-bit extension but because it ran existing 32-bit code better than any other processor on the market.

      Furthermore, the value of Intel's compiler actually isn't so much in the code generation backend -- the part which makes optimizations specific to a given processor. It's in the middle part of the compiler, the part which makes really interesting and smart high level (abstract) optimizations, looking at patterns in your source code to figure out how to eliminate redundant work or rearrange data access patterns for better cache performance. These optimizations work equally well for AMD, so much so that for years AMD used to submit SPEC benchmark scores using Intel's compiler because it gave the best scores even for their CPUs. (Actually, I think they still do this.)

      Until there's a compiler which truly understands the AMD circuitry, I don't see how anyone can know [definitively] the upper bounds of the capabilities of the AMD CPUs.

      Optimizing for AMD CPUs is just not different enough from optimizing for Intel. They both implement the same instruction set, ignoring small cutting edge differences which are mostly irrelevant today (i.e. instructions which will only be used in special libraries, not in the vast majority of code). Due to market pressures, both AMD and Intel have converged on designing CPUs which are relatively insensitive to low level optimization tweaks. They need to run even crappy code very fast, because so much of the code they have to run is crappy, so they have really good execution engines which don't require much (if any) instruction reordering, loop unrolling, or even careful instruction choice. Nearly everything performs well now.

      In fact, these days you know what's turning out to be the best optimization switch in a large number of cases, at least for GCC? -Os, optimize for size. Modern x86 CPUs are so good at running relatively unoptimized code that many traditional tricks (such as loop unrolling and inlining) which used to give better performance at the cost of increasing code size now hurt performance. (Larger code takes more space in caches, so when the CPU doesn't gain anything by that any more, it's actually a negative since cache hit rate is reduced.)

  23. Re:Did you ever notice by nicolas.kassis · · Score: 1

    It only works in class where the problem kid isn't more powerful then the rest. Collective punishment fails if the annoying kid can kick you back down for blaming him.

  24. Meh, not really... by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

    How many businesses do video and graphics work? Not many. I'd wager that not 1 in 10,000 business machines is used regularly for any CPU intensive task. Developers would definitely be somewhat of an exception, but there really aren't that many development groups out there doing compiles of 10+ million line code bases all day every day. I mean I can compile a Linux Kernel on my 2.4 ghz P4 machine (vintage 2004) in a few minutes as long as I have 2 gigs of RAM in it.

    No, 99.9999% of all business machines don't need to be even as powerful as your average home PC, where someone might actually WANT to edit some video, etc. now and then. Those business machines run Office, Web Browser, Outlook, and maybe one or two other business apps.

    In fact I would venture that business is where the desktop performance requirements are falling and will fall the fastest and furthest, and where energy efficiency makes the biggest difference. Any heavy lifting that needs to be done can always be moved to server side applications. There will always be a few high end workstations, but the average business PC is pretty close to being a diskless thin client now in any good shop, and that will be the norm within 3 years.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    1. Re:Meh, not really... by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      The 70's called, they want their dumb terminals and ideas back.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
  25. Not really. by AdamWill · · Score: 1

    Well, I just built a new system and looked all this crap up the other day, so I feel qualified to comment.

    Yes, the new chips finally just about match equally priced Intel chips - at stock.

    The problem is they only go down to $250 or so. Not down to $200 or under, where the lowest-priced Core 2 Quad lives: the Q6600. And the thing about the Q6600 is, it can be trivially overclocked well past 3GHz on stock cooling with no enthusiast messing about. Just bump up the FSB speed and you're good. So for $200 or less you can get a year-old chip that will comfortably outperform AMD's latest and greatest. That's not such great news for AMD, is it?

    And, don't forget, i7 is just Intel bleeding the 'enthusiast' market dry. Essentially they're getting an overpriced version of the new platform out first to capitalize on the market that'll spend any kind of money to have the fastest system on the block. Once they're done screwing those guys, they'll be making essentially the same chips available at much lower prices. Which will in turn drive down the price of the Core 2 generation, making them even more of a no-brainer purchase over the new AMD chips. AMD is basically a whole generation behind, and not looking like it'll catch up any time soon. I just don't see who - except someone who happens to have an existing AM2 motherboard that'll take one of these new chips and is looking for a modest upgrade - is going to buy one of these.

  26. Headline should read... by Pyroja · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... "AMD finally on par with Intel tech from two years ago."

    Seriously. I love AMD. I've been using AMD chips since my very first system of my own, which had a mighty K6-166.

    This past Novemeber, I finally bit the bullet, sold my Athlon X2 system, and upgraded... To a Q6600-based rig. Some may scoff that it's only a 2.4ghz chip, but I'm running it at 3.4ghz right now, and I'm fairly sure I'll reach 3.6ghz with a bit more work.

    To be sure, those who don't overclock, but want a powerful AMD-based system will find this chip worthwhile. I would expect those to be people who already have AM2+ systems looking for an upgrade (I have a good friend that wanted an ultra cheap upgrade for her desktop a few months back... I built her an AM2+ X2 setup. Guess what? Now she can upgrade to something worthwhile. Yay!).

    However, for the enthusiast, the hardware tweaker, the overclocker... The Phenom II is a disappointment. It has been said it can overclock to as high as 3.8ghz with good air cooling, maybe even 4ghz if you go with water. Awesome. C2Q can clock every bit as high, and you'll get more performance per clock out of it as well. I paid $180 for my Q6600. At 3.4ghz, it'll out-pace the top-end Phenom II. That Phenom II cost $275. Which is about the same price as... A low-end Core i7 chip that will overclock to 4ghz and beyond. With the i5 chips coming down the line, what's stopping Intel from slashing Core 2 prices?

    All-in-all, the Phenom II is a powerful chip, and would serve well as the heart of an AMD rig, delivering worthy performance for almost anything. The problem is, a Core 2 Quad will do ya one better every time, for the same cost or less, and has been doing so for the past two years.

    I'm anxiously waiting for AMD to bring back the glory days when they actually tried to compete with Intel, not just chase their taillights.

    --
    [Trojan.]
    1. Re:Headline should read... by mr_stinky_britches · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One of the problems is that Intel has practically unlimited amounts of capital that they can dump into R&D, whereas AMD does not have such deep pockets. So, Intel is far ahead, and AMD will inevitably take a long time to catch up. Combine that with Intel's continually underhanded marketing and business practices, and things begin to look bleak for the underdog we are all cheering for..

      --
      Censorship is obscene. Patriotism is bigotry. Faith is a vice. Slashdot 2.0 sucks.
    2. Re:Headline should read... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Amen to that, I'm getting ready to buy a Q9000-based laptop. Of all companies Acer is first to market (Assuming you can actually get them) and I am NEVER. BUYING. ANOTHER. FUCKING. HP/COMPAQ. I have never had service this bad. Anyway, it's a more budget/mobile version, which is fine with me, lower power FTW. 45W for a Core 2 Quad at 2 GHz? Sign me up. Anyway, the machine is like $1700 with the Q9000, 4GB, BD-ROM/DVD-RW, and an 18 inch LCD. ANYTHING to get away from this stupid Quadro (and my T2600 is showing its age a bit.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  27. more fan please by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

    The first thing that came to my mind when I looked at the pic of their test system was, "can I have some motherboard to go with my heat sink please?" How much longer before people are trying to squeeze components into some kind of massive rectangular radiator instead of a case?

    Anyway. I'm glad AMD was able to get to .45 I knew that was the reason they weren't performing on par with the Intel Duo chips.

    --
    Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
  28. surfing the web by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Man, have you tried to use a recent build of Firefox on a 5-year-old machine lately? It's barely usable unless you have at least 512mb of RAM and a fairly fast CPU.

    1. Re:surfing the web by nine-times · · Score: 1

      No doubt new machines are more responsive, but I know plenty of still people working on 256 MB of RAM without complaining too much. But 512 MB wasn't that rare in 2003.

    2. Re:surfing the web by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      I have.

      My backup laptop is a Toughbook CF-18 Mark I. A first generation Centrino laptop, with a PIIIM at 900Mhz and 768M of RAM. It runs an up-to-date Debian Unstable, with the newest Firefox, with no problems at all. Heck, it even does that with Gnome+Compiz running with all the bells and whistles on, with no lack of responsiveness.

      On the other hand, I must admit that Panasonic seems to know how to design a good motherboard. My work laptop is a Dell Latitude D820, a Core Duo 1.67Ghz, Intel chipset with 1.5G of RAM, and it sucks donkey balls in performance. Interaction starts stuttering the minute the load goes over 2.5, and intensive disk I/O really brings down performance. The Panasonic, with an Intel chipset three generations behind, blows it away. It feels more like a Sparc/Solaris machine when under load: not fast, but interactive tasks stay responsive.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  29. Re:Again, Intel optimised code benchmarks on AMD?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i don't see how this is a troll...

  30. Don't worry by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    If AMD wants to improve sales they should do what they did for the X2 line: lower power consumption. I don't care what any of the "experts" say - the moment I saw the whopping 130w listed next to the i7 920 I immediately decided I didn't want one. The Athlon 4850e already has the crown on the dual core front, so if they can manage a respectable 95w quad core, AMD could corner the efficiency market. I know they had to release this chip to generate revenue, but I'd hoping that low power quad is in their future plans.

    Don't worry, AMD will keep the same power bands they kept in the past. They'll have their 130W, 95W, and 65W desktop parts. I've got a 65W Athlon X2 and it performs well and my CPU fan barely has to spin. When the Phenom II comes out I'll be grabbing a new one. Sadly I'd have to get a new mainboard to take advantage of its additional power features, but oh well.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  31. Who cares about cycles by asm2750 · · Score: 1

    Honestly in this day and age, no one should buy a extremely powerful processor. That is unless you are a data center or need to crunch numbers at a fast pace. Today I would rather see I/O bottlenecks get smaller and a smaller thermal footprint than pay for a faster, higher performance processor that has a TDP of 100W+ and costs $300 or more.

  32. Do you even know what valueram is? by JoeSixpack00 · · Score: 1

    last I checked, OCZ didn't qualify as "value ram".

    Then please check again. Last summer I finally got around to buiding a new computer, and I had been reading specs and reviews on parts for at least 6 months straight. Trust me when I tell you that OCZ isn't the high quaility ram it was back in 2003. They have quaility control complaints all over the place, to the the point where they have customer service people patrol the online feedback just to quiet the fires. That's the problem with reputations: they don't always get updated as quickly as they should.

    Having said that, value ram has nothing to do with brand name or brand quality. Value ram is merely a manufacturer's entry level ram that usually comes without a heat spreaders and thus has highter (factory) latency timings. I think this is what you said didn't exsist.

    1. Re:Do you even know what valueram is? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything "didn't exist", and you linked to DDR3 which is completely different. This is what I was talking about. Or maybe this, for the american consumers. $33.99 and free shipping seems like a pretty sweet deal. You can get ram with even lower latency for the same price, but it'll be a lower rated speed.

      I've never had problems with OCZ. I've built 4 different systems in the last year, all using OCZ RAM. They all run perfectly. My personal comp even has the memory overclocked by about 30%. Haven't had any issues at all.

    2. Re:Do you even know what valueram is? by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      You forgot the "YMMV" at the end of your statements ;)

  33. Who cares? by Carbon016 · · Score: 1

    Most gamers are better off spending under $200 on a CPU, and most consumers won't tell the difference.

    People who buy quad core processors nowadays either want extremely performance for multithreaded tasks and are willing to pay (a lot!) or they're total dumbasses, in either case they'll buy an i7.

    If AMD wants to catch up they need to cut these things down to duals like they did the original Phenom to 7750+.

    1. Re:Who cares? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      I agree. I generally don't spend much on the CPU. I'd rather have fast memory and a nice GPU. I'm seriously considering dropping as much as $250 for one of the AM3 variants and getting some DDR3, but I need to see what the cost of the motherboard and memory is going to be as well.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    2. Re:Who cares? by daybot · · Score: 1

      People who buy quad core processors nowadays either want extremely performance for multithreaded tasks and are willing to pay (a lot!) or they're total dumbasses, in either case they'll buy an i7.

      Actually the lower-end quad core chips aren't expensive and quad core is now mainstream - for their average desktops, Dell seem to be choosing low-end C2Q chips in preference to higher-clocked C2Ds. I think this is because the typical consumer and computer store salesman have switched from clock speed to cores as the performance differentiator - "this one's faster - it's a quad".

      Personally, for my heaviest uses, Handbrake and Folding@Home, I'll take more CPU grunt in whatever form happens to be most cost effective: more cores or faster cores. The Q6600 is popular because you get both: four cores, easily clocked to 3.4GHz+ - that's a lot of grunt for under $200.

  34. Advertised average power usage != TDP by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    Uh, isn't that backwards? Unless something's changed recently I believe the Intel TDP _is_ 'worst case', whereas AMDs figures are for 'typical use'.

    No, AMDs TDP is a fairly true representation of maximum power. It has to be, since it is what OEMs use to design cooling solutions, and those cooling solutions must be designed around the worst-case scenario (at least in terms of processor power output, not necessarily other environmental factors).

    Unlike Intel, AMD does not have a thermal clock gating circuit that will slow the processor down should it ever rise above the stated TDP number, so AMD's TDP must truly be a maximum. Intel on the other hand can pick a TDP that chops off most of the 'long tail' of high power but unlikely circumstance, and count on their clock gating to enforce the TDP value should one of those circumstances arise.

    This is part of why AMD started using "average power" in their advertising, because Intel had an advantage in perceived power consumption based on TDP, since Intel's was much closer to average power. Starting with Phenoms they call this number ACP (Average CPU Power).

    So you're not completely out in left field, just mistaken about the relationship between AMD's TDPs and "typical use" numbers.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  35. Re:Again, Intel optimised code benchmarks on AMD?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can only agree with that.
    If you take a look at benchmarks performed under linux (like the ones of the website phoronix.com), you can notice that AMD CPUs often outperforms Intel ones.
    It would be really interresting to get benchmarks done under a fair environment.

  36. Re:Again, Intel optimised code benchmarks on AMD?? by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

    Howso? At least link to the page in TFA that says the code they're using is Intel optimised. I've read two links out of this discussion but I have no intention of reading TFA unless I really have to. :)

    --
    Nick
  37. glory days by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not to take away from some impressive stuff AMD has done, but AMD's glory days were also helped out by Intel shooting themselves in the foot. Back when AMD had the top-end x86s, invented AMD64, etc., Intel's 900-pound-gorilla R&D machine was off working on Itanium, running their x86 line mostly on autopilot. Once they mostly gave up on Itanium and swung their resources back to x86, AMD, as you might expect, has had a much harder time.

  38. AMD= 2 steps behind intel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ok so they made a cpu as fast as a core2quad, its good to know they are releasing something to keep up with older cpu's some of us want to use a faster cpu, some of us can use it with animation and video editing and extreme gaming rigs. Im happy with my i7 and i wont go back to any amd unless they can out perform the i7 enough to make it worth my time effort and money to switch.

  39. Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The clips will be short so it's not going to take long to encode.

  40. Re:Did you ever notice by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    AMD has been headquartered in Sunnyvale, California for almost 40 years.

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    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  41. There are a whole slew of by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

    responses to that.

    The trend towards reconsolidation of functionality in the back room and away from the client desktop only grows stronger with time.

    The conditions under which fat 'client' PC computing originally appeared no longer pertain. I'll illustrate with an example. In the mid 80's I was working for an engineering firm. They had a few 1000 users, a LAN, a cluster of computers in the basement, and a dumb terminal on everyone's desk. Over the next 5 years disconnected PCs rapidly replaced a lot of these terminals for several reasons.

    1) Networking PCs (or anything) was expensive, so if you NEEDED a PC, it was almost guaranteed not to be on the network.

    2) People needed graphics capabilities and the ability to read data from floppies etc which were not possible with a dumb terminal in that day.

    3) Department managers loved to control stuff, so of course they'd rather have a PC that was THEIRS and not a terminal, which 'belonged' to IT.

    In every other respect the switch to PCs was negative overall. They were MUCH more expensive, required management, couldn't be backed up easily, and usually couldn't get access to resources on the network except via sneakernet.

    Nowadays the 'positives' for PC/workstation fat client type machines are virtually gone. They WILL be networked and since x86 PC architecture is virtually ubiquitous there is no longer a distinction in capabilities between a PC and a 'terminal' (thin client). Furthermore the costs of unmanaged systems have finally begun to become fully appreciated. IT can't tolerate machines on the network they don't control and departments can't afford to or be bothered with dealing with the associated costs/risks themselves, so both IT and the client department would rather let IT manage things, and IT has no incentive not to then make everything a thin client.

    Now, maybe the environment you work in is really backward and has not figured all this out yet. That's true with a lot of small businesses, but they are learning, and it is getting quite easy to provision network centric applications which often only require a web browser on the client side. So even the small businesses are less and less needing fat clients. I'll predict that no such thing will exist as a full up PC in business at all in 10 years. There will still be workstations for very specific uses, CAD or high end video/graphics work, but even those will mostly or even entirely utilize networked resources to boot and for storage.

    In my business this sort of transition has already pretty much completed. The existing PCs are just old legacy hardware that will be replaced with diskless machines when they go end of life.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    1. Re:There are a whole slew of by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      So basically your response, in summary, is yes, you agree, things should go back to the 70's, but for good business (economic) reasons. I see your point on the economic reasons, it's just that no one wants that, so good luck with that happening in 10 years. E.g. every manager is gonna want a real PC, not a dumb terminal. Professional-level people will favor working for companies that provide them real PC's instead of dumb terminals. It won't fly. It also prolly makes economic sense to make salaried workers punch in and out every day like McDonald's workers, to make sure they're not cheating on hours. Except the only people who will work in subpar working conditions are subpar people, and attracting and retaining only subpar people is probably not good business sense.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    2. Re:There are a whole slew of by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I totally disagree with that.

      A company with a sensible and cost effective IT infrastructure has the advantage in business. So the choices are you can work for someone that can't pay you well and is always on the verge of being wiped out by the competition, or you can work for the one that leads its industry, pays well, and makes your job easier.

      Thus I would argue that companies who stick to the old fashioned way of doing things based on some misguided idea that they are coddling their employees are dead ducks in the long run. Not only that but by having a crappy and unmanagable IT infrastructure they will actually be making the work environment less friendly and the lives of their staff more difficult.

      99% of office workers in any case do not care about, nor even understand beyond a simple level what goes on to make their computer work right. They just want to sit down at the thing and do the job they are hired to do. They could not care less if the app they run is on their desktop or on a Citrix farm someplace or if it is a web app. And they have no clue or care about if their computer boots off a hard drive or the network.

      What they DO care about is that their documents are accessible from any machine, that their settings and applications come up no matter where they log in, that their files are never lost forever, etc. Since these things are MUCH easier to achieve and can be done much cheaper in a more centralized IT infrastructure, that is what they will like to use.

      Additionally departments are no longer so keen on controlling their own IT assets as they once were. 15 years ago a manager would think it made sense to 'own' his own desktop machines. Nowadays he'll have to care about security, data integrity, configuration management, etc. if he does that because modern businesses have learned to care about stuff like that. Today's manager would much rather leave that to the IT department budget than be distracted from his primary work to deal with it internally.

      Granted there are plenty of companies with bad IT departments or no real clue about IT where the net result of centralization can easily be negative, but that is not a criticism of the superiority of the approach, it is just a bad implementation. In today's business environment a business that can't implement well, WILL eventually pay the price for that failing. It really isn't a choice anymore. Its a tough world out there and only the best are going to survive the next few years.

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      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    3. Re:There are a whole slew of by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      Pay levels for occupations are not related to IT efficiencies, so that's a red herring. And I don't believe organizations' actual surviveability are based in any significant part on their IT costs. Any more than it does their accounting costs. IT is just an infrastructure/support dept., and is no more special than any other.

      Providing basic desktop PC's for office workers is not "coddling" them.

      And office workers do care about what it's like using the systems they have to use everyday. At my first job our bug-tracking system required using a 3270 terminal emulator. No one likes dinosaur systems. No one likes the awkward and primitive UI's, and lag and lack of interoperability. Web apps are better, but are still pitiful in terms of the richness of UI controls and responsiveness of a desktop application. And no one wants to be dead in the water when the network goes down or a server goes down or is overloaded. These things are typically stressed, and catastrophically fail much more often than a single PC, that spends most of its life loafing. The negatives of undiversifying by undistributing failure points needs to be weighed against the positives of easier control. Seems to me like it's mainly trading one kind of risk for another, and pissing everyone off in the process.

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    4. Re:There are a whole slew of by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

      I really don't think you can compare a 3270 emulator based app to anything modern at all. Seems kind of irrelevant to me. That's 1980's vintage stuff, lol!

      Pay levels certainly ARE related to overall business efficiency! It is ridiculous to claim that businesses with bad and inefficient processes are going to be able to pay as well as ones with good processes. They may HAVE to pay equally, and in that case they will FAIL and go out of business.

      There may well be in many/most businesses more critical cost centers than IT, but every wasted dollar is wasted. If your business doesn't care about that, then they are stupid and someone is going to hand them their lunch one day in the probably not too distant future.

      I also disagree that you have a more reliable infrastructure when you rely on a bunch of stand alone machines that have to be individually managed. Each and every one of those machines is a failure point, and when one fails you now have to spend all the time and energy rebuilding the whole thing to the proper configuration. Whereas in our diskless thin client environment you just send a guy down to swap out the broken terminal and in the mean time the employee can just log on at some other terminal in the interim.

      Server side application availability is never a problem either. All application servers are running off a storage pool which has enough redundancy to achieve 100% uptime, and the actual server instances themselves are fairly meaningless, there is no data on them and the servers are either VMs or again machines that boot remote off the pool and can be replaced/failed over with usually no down time at all. The advantages are huge. In a 1000 years I would never even dream of going back.

      Pretty much sounds to me like the place you're talking about is seriously behind the times and has some pretty crappy IT management practices (or more likely none at all). In my line of work if a line of business application was unavailable for 3 hours during market hours I'd be out on my ass by the end of the day!

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      "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
    5. Re:There are a whole slew of by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      Many organizations are horrifically inefficient yet survive just fine, such as on sheer inertia.

      A wasteful company might very well pay *more* than market (waste the wages budget too). How well a company's doing affects how many people they can hire, not what they can pay them.

      If you're at a place that does IT "right", such as for example the redundancy and the attitude to always keep email available during office hours, you've probably found the holy grail, as most people will never see such an organization. Same for the area of software development, my field -- I've worked at 5 places so far, 3 small and 2 ginormous, and nowhere has it been done "right", or even close to it. Companies just don't care that much about the technology parts to spend much attention making sure they're done in near optimal fashion.

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