And it's decidedly unimpressive.
The Athlon 64 2800+ runs at a whopping 1.6GHz. The only good thing about it is the insanely low memory latency (90ns) due to the integrated memory controller.
Xbit's preview is here: http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu.../athlon64.html
The site is extremely slow (everyone's looking at it), so I've mirrored the interesting benchmarks:
I wonder what the 3.0GHz with HyperThreading would do to the Athlon 64 2800+.
Or how about the 3.2GHz P4 due within a couple weeks...
Or how about the Prescott P4 with SSE3, 1MB L2 cache, improved hyperthreading, etc.
AMD looks like it's in trouble still. The only thing Athlon 64 has going for it is the integrated memory controller and 64-bit addressing (and who really needs >4GB memory right now?), and the additional registers of x86-64.
The Athlon 64 2800+ runs at a whopping 1.6GHz. The only good thing about it is the insanely low memory latency (90ns) due to the integrated memory controller.
Xbit's preview is here: http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu.../athlon64.html
The site is extremely slow (everyone's looking at it), so I've mirrored the interesting benchmarks:
I wonder what the 3.0GHz with HyperThreading would do to the Athlon 64 2800+.
Or how about the 3.2GHz P4 due within a couple weeks...
Or how about the Prescott P4 with SSE3, 1MB L2 cache, improved hyperthreading, etc.
AMD looks like it's in trouble still. The only thing Athlon 64 has going for it is the integrated memory controller and 64-bit addressing (and who really needs >4GB memory right now?), and the additional registers of x86-64.
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