First of all, though it’s claimed that you’re running an FX-60 processor on the machine, I have yet to see an established motherboard and processor with an image that says "processor unknown".You’ll notice that the image I am referring to on Anandtech's website (the bios image) states that the AMD processor is “unknown” which makes me believe that the bios they are running is outdated. So, I did a bit of digging and low and behold, the DFI bios version “D49C-32” they are running is from 10/11/05. There has been 1 major revision with major fixes that include:Set Cool 'n' Quiet Default to Disabled- With Cool & Quiet enabled, AMD processors will throttle in order to save power and bring their thermal load down. This means the processor could be running as low as 800MHz in certain programs – no matter what the program is. In theory Cool & Quiet is supposed to throttle up to maximum in games but this is not always the case. No enthusiast PC goes out with Cool & Quiet enabled unless it’s a fanless machine or media center.Add Support for AMD Athlon 64 FX60 CPU- According to DFI the FX-60 will not operate correctly without this bios update. Without official support for the FX-60 CPU I’m not sure what we’re comparing against here.Fix Memory Timings 2-1-1-1-1 and 4-1-1 Mode Wrong & Fix Read Preamble Table Error.- Memory latency can make a massive difference in performance. If the latency was not running at the correct latency we can see a pretty big difference in all kinds of performance. Anandtech stated “The AMD system used 1GB of DDR400 running at 2-2-2/1T timings…” Apparently this isn’t the case, but they would not be able to tell without having the platform in house.Fix Fill 3114 SVID&SSID under Cross fire mode.- More apparent performance issues under Crossfire mode.Next, when you take a future Intel chipset and compare it to a chipset that no enthusiast supports (RD480) with an outdated bios it’s like taking a Ferrari and putting it on Bias-Ply tires. It’s just not a good way to show off a “new” technology.Had Intel taken an RD580 (Crossfire Xpress 3200) and coupled with the AMD Athlon FX-60 processor they almost certainly would have seen some better numbers just based on the bios issues alone. The ATi Xpress 3200 would have improved the overclocking and decoding performance as well. You don’t need a time machine to jump over to the nearest Newegg and buy the latest parts. It’s almost like Intel took their time machine 6 months ahead while throwing AMD into a time warp set a few months back in time.
As far as we could tell, there was nothing fishy going on with the benchmarks or the install. Both systems were clean and used the latest versions of all of the drivers (the ATI graphics driver was modified to recognize the Conroe CPU but that driver was loaded on both AMD and Intel systems).
as many others have put it , Intel doesn't win , neither does AMD.. the customers win ! If it werent for AMD we'd all be forced to pay high prices for crappy processors , if it weren't for intel we would probably be at least 5 years behind in CPU technology .
Intel reveals Vista premium OS Logo details 945 / 965 chipsets can do itBy Fuad Abazovic: Friday 24 March 2006, 08:49[Blocked Ads][Blocked Ads]INTEL sent out a document that clearly states what you need to get a Vista certified sticker. Vista is again delayed until January 2007 but Intel wants to be ready, just in case it comes out on time. Intel claims that both 945 and 965 chipsets are eligible for the Vista Capable PC Programme and the Windows Vista Premium OS Logo. In order to be qualified, your machine will need to support dual-channel memory, at least 1GB of system memory and an adequate memory speed to run the Aero desktop. We don’t have any idea what the "adequate memory speed" is, that Intel is chatting about. We are uncertain whether these Intel integrated chipsets will be able to support Aero Glass as well, but we guess so. This applies to both integrated and discrete versions of 945/965 chipsets and we are sure that Intel 915 chipset can not get this sticker as it doesn't support all you need for Vista. That's why Intel buys ATI's integrated chipsets and sells them as Grant County D101GGC, and soon Grant County 2, D102GGC2 Motherboards.