the Black Monarch wrote:Whaa??? The website that I went to for such information gave 13.5 as the voltage for the mobiles and 15 as the voltage for the desktops. Are you going by Intel voltages or AMD voltages? There may be a reason why you don't see many laptops with AMDs in them
Oh shit, I made a HUGE mistake in my reply..I meant POWER not Voltage. The core voltage of most chips is around 1.65 V, so in essence my reply is still the same in that 15 is wrong. However, I'll answer the power issue since that is what I meant to discuss..voltage has always been around there for the last 2 - 3 years and hasn't been a real issue. Power has.
Actually the hottest (Power-wise) are Intel...not AMD. Ours average 65 W core, while the new Northwoods can go in the 80's (maybe it was high 70's). These are typical desktop powers, I can assure you. I work on this stuff and specifically did some of this testing in the past.
As for laptops, actually we have a 16 W uPGA part that is being used in our thin-and-light notebooks carried about Fujitsu. On average though, normal notebooks (both intel and ours) are between 25 W - 45 W. These are the normal sized ones and not thin-and-light. Stuff like Centrinos and our thin-and-lights are easily below 20 W which is why they operate longer..consume less power.
the Black Monarch wrote:It's known that Intel is taking advantage of public stupidity. However, I've yet to see anything suggesting that Intel is in any way responsible for said stupidity. (unless one of those Blue Man Group commercials said something like "Gigahertz is everything. Do not pay attention to instructions per clock cycle, that's a bunch of crap" and I missed it...)
Almost all the commercials on TV ALWAYS specify fairly loudly "comes with the new Intel Pentium IV processor at 3 Ghz." They almost always stated the frequency in the Dell, HP/Compaq and Gateway commercials. I can easily see how one can miss it since one can just get used to hearing it.
the Black Monarch wrote:Yeah, I thought it had something to do with being 64-bit, but I couldn't remember well enough to say it with any kind of certainty.
Was the Itanium II any better?
Itanium II was better, but they're still pretty slow and no one is buying since they are expensive as hell.
the Black Monarch wrote:Whoa, I didn't know you'd upped your L2 cache. I need to visit those websites again.
A whole megabyte of L2 cache... oooh... drool...
Yeah our Barton cores (model 2800+ - 3200+) have increased L2's and some have higher FSBs.
the Black Monarch wrote:No, it's fair enough after you slammed Intel so many times
Personally, it seems to me like you all too greatly enjoy saying things like "Yeah, our chips and their chips perform about the same, but our chips are better because they're more efficient" and "Yeah, the P4 goes way faster than the P3 ever could, but the P3 was more efficient so it's better." Something just doesn't add up there

... I mean, I like efficiency and all (my first car is going to be a Honda Insight), but come on... when you see a P4 overclocked to 4.44 Gigs and the P6 core (Pro/2/3/Celeron/Centrino/whatever) hasn't even been pushed past 2.0... maybe that horrible inefficiency isn't quite as much of a drawback as you thought

Well as I said in the earlier argument Performance = Speed * instructions/clock. Obviously speed DOES play a roll and thus if they operate say 800 Mhz faster than us, even if we have the more efficient core...they even out at around the same performance. There are two variables to the equation (although most consumers think only speed matters). Basically if you do things fast...how many things are you doing in that time? We do more things per clock, but our speed is slower. They do less, but do things more often. Make sense? This is how a 2.25 Ghz Athlon can have COMPRABLE performance to that of a 3.0 Ghz P4.
As I stated earlier, the INITIAL reasoning for this design change was to get the speed since consumers want it and the P3 architecture (or any architecture that efficient) can't scale that high up. People would THINK the chips were slower, but in fact they are very efficient and thus performance. That's why they added pipeline stages and made it easy to get Frequency (they average 200 Mhz a quarter...amazing). At the same time, the design is inefficient. Again...INITIAL reasoning was this..obviously it's paying off since A) consumers like speed...continue to buy and B) speed is one part of the equation. I am just stating I dislike inefficient designs since I am an engineer and well...I couldn't see myself on PURPOSE designing something inefficient. However, I won't deny that it was an excellent move in terms of marketing and consumer-outlook.
the Black Monarch wrote:If things go REALLY well in the next few weeks, I might be getting a quad Opteron desktop/server.
I hope you got a lot of money....
