Core i7 does have competitionIn some thingsBy Nebojsa NovakovicTuesday, 19 May 2009, 13:18NO, IT'S NOT AMD, it's Core 2 Quad. Lotsa website gigglebytes were recently spent comparing the Phenom II Black Edition 955 to the Core i7 965 or the as still yet unannounced 975. (Notice how similar these part numbers are getting, by the way?)However, aside from extreme overclocking, Core i7 still wins almost all benchmarks. Same for its dual-headed twin, the Nehalem EP Xeon W5580. There is, however, some not so well advertised competition in some areas. Ever looked at the SiSoft Sandra 2009 AES cryptography benchmark? Here it is:Sisoft-sandra-crypto-screenNotice how the Nehalem is throughly overrun - by more than 10 per cent - by its immediate 3.2 GHz Penryn based predecessor despite the newbie running at 3.33 GHz in Turbo mode, while AMD needs to use 4-socket monsters to stay on the charts at least till Istanbul arrives? The same would apply on the desktop side, by extension.Why? Well, every "Yorkfield" Core 2 Quad or its "Harpertown" Xeon equivalent have two dual core dies inside, each with 6 MB fast (15 to 18 cycle) L2 caches, for 12 MB total. Yes. there is a humongous FSB hop penalty when going between the dies, but it is still smaller than going between two chips across two FSBs and a North Bridge in between when using a DP system.However, if for some reason your critical code fits nicely in that 12 MB cache, and the threads don't kiss each other too much over that FSB - and yet that same code finds Nehalem's shared 8 MB L3 at 35+ cycles depending on the uncore clock too small and/or slow - then that code may run faster on the older chip.As mentioned before, I really hope that Westmere will have, besides a 12 MB L3 cache to feed its expected six cores, also an improved latency profile including eliminating the 3-cycle core-to-uncore penalty that exists right now even if both are clocked the same.A 975X chipset-style PAT mode that cuts that latency for direct in-sync clock situations would be welcome back. In the meantime, if you have similarly clocked and configured "Penryn" and "Nehalem" generation systems, and time at hand, just play with your apps, you might discover some interesting stuff! µ
Money talks dude, but hey let's see if they can pull the proverbial rabbit out the hat as their backs are to the wall XD
Quote from: W1nTry on August 10, 2009, 10:42:14 PMMoney talks dude, but hey let's see if they can pull the proverbial rabbit out the hat as their backs are to the wall XDyou mean they go pull ah yugi?believe in the heart of the processors...
I ent really read up on Core i5 as yet bt i take it this chip requires a different socket compatible mainboard as well?If it does it kinda bad for those who have Core i7 and wanna try out this new platform but have to shell out more for a new board as well. (Long live LGA 775!)
Yep...socket 1156, and its a crippled i7, so I don't want one unless it can best my 4 GHz Q9650 significantly in everything .
now normally i dont mind intel's board revisionsbut... x58 just came out.. there are like 3 processors on it and now they doing this...cant say i can agree unless they plan to continue releasing awesometastic i7s and not kill the damn chipset already.