Lab Tested: Amd's Bulldozer Packs Plenty Of Cores, But Not Enough Power
#1
Posted 12 October 2011 - 06:01 PM
#2
Posted 12 October 2011 - 06:46 PM
I thought I would never see the day
Well. Now, to tomshardware.com for some hardcore performance articles.
#3
Posted 12 October 2011 - 07:05 PM
2600K has 3.6ghz quadcore with 1333mhz RAM controller 9mb cache for 300 dollars.
So even the quad core stomps 2600K. oh but hyperthread is magic
Now intel hyperthread relies on the inefficiency of a process to execute in order to boost performance. so to perform well it has to perform badly to have gaps. then hyper thread fills those gaps. Oh btw that data is sitting in cache and RAM using it up and causing latency. It causes stutter which is coincidentally good for more hyperthreading. Now imagine the front side of that x86 core is beefed up for 2 cores instead of one core waiting for a gap with 2 processes. 2 strong threads with 2 cores per module would make intel the badest azz CPU around, too bad AMD doesn't have that.
There are a lot of fake benchmarks out. many were posted before the final silicone was ever produced
#4
Posted 13 October 2011 - 02:48 AM
It seems that this will be a huge disappointment. I wonder whether in AMD are trying to drive out those who still do not want to move over to Intel. If so, then it is well on the road. I do not know if anyone from the company monitors these comments, all the same, congratulations on being thrown for four years. What happened to you?
We waited, waited and waited ... I wonder, what did AMD actually do in previous four years?
It seems that this will be a huge disappointment. I wonder whether in AMD are trying to drive out those who still do not want to move over to Intel. If so, then it is well on the road. I do not know if anyone from the company monitors these comments, all the same, congratulations on being thrown for four years. What happened to you?
#5
Posted 13 October 2011 - 04:18 AM
Well as someone who has used AMD for the last 8 years, I'm really inclined to ditch to Intel. I just recently went and upgraded to an ASUS am3+ board with an Athlon 2 X3 (4th core unlocked). It's great, but the processor was supposed to be a temporary one until i went for a high performance one. Now i'm left wondering what to do.
On one side, i'm hoping for a price cut to justify the purchase. But i'm also just willing to wait another 6 months. I can then see Ivy Bridge and Piledriver. If Piledriver only is a 10-15% increase as AMD has stated, i'll probably start with a new build and go Ivy Bridge.
Sorry AMD to be less than impressed, but i hoped for more in the 5 years of promises. I'll always consider you as an option, but you've got to give me something to work with.
#6
Posted 13 October 2011 - 05:33 AM
Scottyugs7, on 12 October 2011 - 07:05 PM, said:
2600K has 3.6ghz quadcore with 1333mhz RAM controller 9mb cache for 300 dollars.
The SB CPUS all support 1866 ram.
Quote
Now intel hyperthread relies on the inefficiency of a process to execute in order to boost performance. so to perform well it has to perform badly to have gaps. then hyper thread fills those gaps. Oh btw that data is sitting in cache and RAM using it up and causing latency. It causes stutter which is coincidentally good for more hyperthreading. Now imagine the front side of that x86 core is beefed up for 2 cores instead of one core waiting for a gap with 2 processes. 2 strong threads with 2 cores per module would make intel the badest azz CPU around, too bad AMD doesn't have that.
There are a lot of fake benchmarks out. many were posted before the final silicone was ever produced
No the AMD 'Quad core' Bulldozer does NOT touch any of the SB chips. You need the 8 core to come close. Even then, they are slower clock for clock than the last generation Phenom II's. These new chips are crap.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#7
Posted 13 October 2011 - 05:37 AM
IlonaRamic, on 13 October 2011 - 02:48 AM, said:
It seems that this will be a huge disappointment. I wonder whether in AMD are trying to drive out those who still do not want to move over to Intel. If so, then it is well on the road. I do not know if anyone from the company monitors these comments, all the same, congratulations on being thrown for four years. What happened to you?
TO be fair, this is a complete and total redesign of the core. It is designed to be expandable very easily and quickly. Moving to a 22nm process will drop the TDP a bit, and possibly allow for 10 or even 12 core processors. For heavily multithreaded applications, this could be worth something.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#8
Posted 13 October 2011 - 07:30 AM
the price of intel and amd was almost the same and really depended on which graphics card you used. Now AMD is starting to be priced like old intel with out the performance.
#9
Posted 13 October 2011 - 08:01 AM
waldojim, on 13 October 2011 - 05:37 AM, said:
IlonaRamic, on 13 October 2011 - 02:48 AM, said:
It seems that this will be a huge disappointment. I wonder whether in AMD are trying to drive out those who still do not want to move over to Intel. If so, then it is well on the road. I do not know if anyone from the company monitors these comments, all the same, congratulations on being thrown for four years. What happened to you?
TO be fair, this is a complete and total redesign of the core. It is designed to be expandable very easily and quickly. Moving to a 22nm process will drop the TDP a bit, and possibly allow for 10 or even 12 core processors. For heavily multithreaded applications, this could be worth something.
Yea but that's not an option until 2013 at the earliest. The issue is performance now. Hopefully this succeeds in the server market or we won't see an AMD in 2013.
#10
Posted 13 October 2011 - 08:56 AM
timw076, on 13 October 2011 - 08:01 AM, said:
Nah, people have predicted AMD's demise for many years now. Truth is, in the budget market, AMD always takes the lead. For sub $200 processors, there still isn't much choice. For sub $500 complete builds there flat out is no other choice.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#11
Posted 14 October 2011 - 03:12 PM
#12
Posted 14 October 2011 - 06:07 PM
#13
Posted 14 October 2011 - 06:12 PM
Scottyugs7, on 14 October 2011 - 06:07 PM, said:
Considering that all the 2100+ ram out there were designed with Intel CPUs in mind... I think I will pass on your judgment. I run 1600Mhz ram on my i5, and haven't hurt it yet. Maybe because you have little real understanding of the situation?
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#14
Posted 16 October 2011 - 11:32 AM
timw076, on 13 October 2011 - 08:01 AM, said:
waldojim, on 13 October 2011 - 05:37 AM, said:
IlonaRamic, on 13 October 2011 - 02:48 AM, said:
It seems that this will be a huge disappointment. I wonder whether in AMD are trying to drive out those who still do not want to move over to Intel. If so, then it is well on the road. I do not know if anyone from the company monitors these comments, all the same, congratulations on being thrown for four years. What happened to you?
TO be fair, this is a complete and total redesign of the core. It is designed to be expandable very easily and quickly. Moving to a 22nm process will drop the TDP a bit, and possibly allow for 10 or even 12 core processors. For heavily multithreaded applications, this could be worth something.
Yea but that's not an option until 2013 at the earliest. The issue is performance now. Hopefully this succeeds in the server market or we won't see an AMD in 2013.
Looking at only the facts; and not anyone that wants their off the wall opinion taken as fact... We'll see ten core next year.
AMD is a company so diverse that it is no suprise it's been around since 1969; had a last year revenue of 6.494 Billion, and builds quite the number of products well outside of chips - and btw even outside of servers these chips are being built today into gaming systems that are flying off the shelf so to state.
No need to worry about AMD. This chip will stand well on it's own. Even if the chip were to fail massively (which it will not) the AMD company and name will still be around for the long haul. I'll take that bet.
#15
Posted 17 October 2011 - 04:48 AM
#16
Posted 17 October 2011 - 02:36 PM
kellerbl, on 17 October 2011 - 04:48 AM, said:
sandy bridge only supports dual channel too it was the older intel that tried triple channel and it did not help out much
~M. Kathleen Casey
Take Care and Good Luck
:-)
#17
Posted 17 October 2011 - 02:42 PM
before Xmas
Then AMDs price to performance will be better
:-)
GL and TC
This post has been edited by dragon69: 17 October 2011 - 02:43 PM
~M. Kathleen Casey
Take Care and Good Luck
:-)
#18
Posted 17 October 2011 - 02:50 PM
it sounds like they would be good to convert one or two divx files to dvd ( with convertx2dvd) and you could still surf the web and use skype ( or google talk) and suffer no slow downs
when the price drops some i would like to check out my theory
~M. Kathleen Casey
Take Care and Good Luck
:-)
#19
Posted 17 October 2011 - 02:56 PM
waldojim, on 13 October 2011 - 08:56 AM, said:
timw076, on 13 October 2011 - 08:01 AM, said:
Nah, people have predicted AMD's demise for many years now. Truth is, in the budget market, AMD always takes the lead. For sub $200 processors, there still isn't much choice. For sub $500 complete builds there flat out is no other choice.
i think jim is right here if you've got big bucks to spend and need top performance then go Intel BUT if you want a decent computer and don't need the extra 15% performance go AMD
With out AMD around we would be paying a 1000 bucks for a sandy bridge so competition is good ... for us consumers IMHO
~M. Kathleen Casey
Take Care and Good Luck
:-)
#20
Posted 17 October 2011 - 03:42 PM
dragon69, on 17 October 2011 - 02:36 PM, said:
kellerbl, on 17 October 2011 - 04:48 AM, said:
sandy bridge only supports dual channel too it was the older intel that tried triple channel and it did not help out much
It was a specific line of CPUS - the 1366. The new Socket 2011 "performance" line if you will from Intel will use a Sandy Bridge core and support quad channel ram. It does help, you just have to have the right applications to take advantage of it.
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
Help













