...working for a Computer Outlet that the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor. He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked and that Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors. It's his opinion by experience that Intel is behind.
What's your take on all this? Expert opinions appreciated.
Terry
Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Moderator: Ras
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Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Terry McCracken
Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
-> TrueTerry McCracken wrote:the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor.
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors.
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Looks like his friend is AMD fanboi.Golem wrote:-> TrueTerry McCracken wrote:the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor.
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors.

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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Aaaand...

-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:Intel is behind.

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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Actually that is what I thought. I knew Intel put to duals on one chip.Golem wrote:-> TrueTerry McCracken wrote:the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor.
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked
-> FalseTerry McCracken wrote:Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors.
I still considered it a quad core as you can use up to four cores at once.
The difference with the Phenom is it has 4 cores on 1 die as opposed to 2 dies.
How much real difference does this make, 2 dies 4 cores to a single die 4 cores? Is there any real speed-up? Should Intel adopt the same strategy to boost their Quad Core line? I think maybe they should?
Terry
P.S. Thanks to all who replied.
Terry McCracken
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Here's the truth. The intel quad _is_ a true quad-core. What they do is each core has its own Level-1 cache. Each pair of cores share a larger L2 cache. The primary difference is that the AMD processors share a L3 on-chip cache, with private L1/L2 for each processor.Terry McCracken wrote:...working for a Computer Outlet that the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor. He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked and that Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors. It's his opinion by experience that Intel is behind.
What's your take on all this? Expert opinions appreciated.
Terry
The AMD L3 is pretty comparable with the Intel L2 so that is not a big issue, except for the AMD sharing L3 across all 4 cores, while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache. The AMD approach is technically better, but the Intel Core-2 architecture is so much better the AMD processors still fall far behind in performance...
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
Thanks Bob! If you could send me even more detailed information and/or good readable links on this topic (here or my inbox) it would be more than appreciated.bob wrote:Here's the truth. The intel quad _is_ a true quad-core. What they do is each core has its own Level-1 cache. Each pair of cores share a larger L2 cache. The primary difference is that the AMD processors share a L3 on-chip cache, with private L1/L2 for each processor.Terry McCracken wrote:...working for a Computer Outlet that the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor. He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked and that Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors. It's his opinion by experience that Intel is behind.
What's your take on all this? Expert opinions appreciated.
Terry
The AMD L3 is pretty comparable with the Intel L2 so that is not a big issue, except for the AMD sharing L3 across all 4 cores, while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache. The AMD approach is technically better, but the Intel Core-2 architecture is so much better the AMD processors still fall far behind in performance...
Thanks Again!
Best,
Terry
Terry McCracken
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
tom's hardware page is a good resource. And a google of "quad core" will turn up a ton of information (you might add either AMD or Intel to get more specific).Terry McCracken wrote:Thanks Bob! If you could send me even more detailed information and/or good readable links on this topic (here or my inbox) it would be more than appreciated.bob wrote:Here's the truth. The intel quad _is_ a true quad-core. What they do is each core has its own Level-1 cache. Each pair of cores share a larger L2 cache. The primary difference is that the AMD processors share a L3 on-chip cache, with private L1/L2 for each processor.Terry McCracken wrote:...working for a Computer Outlet that the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor. He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked and that Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors. It's his opinion by experience that Intel is behind.
What's your take on all this? Expert opinions appreciated.
Terry
The AMD L3 is pretty comparable with the Intel L2 so that is not a big issue, except for the AMD sharing L3 across all 4 cores, while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache. The AMD approach is technically better, but the Intel Core-2 architecture is so much better the AMD processors still fall far behind in performance...
Thanks Again!
Best,
Terry
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
where say:bob wrote:tom's hardware page is a good resource. And a google of "quad core" will turn up a ton of information (you might add either AMD or Intel to get more specific).Terry McCracken wrote:Thanks Bob! If you could send me even more detailed information and/or good readable links on this topic (here or my inbox) it would be more than appreciated.bob wrote:Here's the truth. The intel quad _is_ a true quad-core. What they do is each core has its own Level-1 cache. Each pair of cores share a larger L2 cache. The primary difference is that the AMD processors share a L3 on-chip cache, with private L1/L2 for each processor.Terry McCracken wrote:...working for a Computer Outlet that the Intel Core2 Quad isn't a True Quad Core but a mere Core 2 Dualx2 unlike the AMD 4 Core Processor. He went on to say the AMD True 4 Core is faster when overclocked and that Intel doesn't allow for overclocking on their recent line of processors. It's his opinion by experience that Intel is behind.
What's your take on all this? Expert opinions appreciated.
Terry
The AMD L3 is pretty comparable with the Intel L2 so that is not a big issue, except for the AMD sharing L3 across all 4 cores, while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache. The AMD approach is technically better, but the Intel Core-2 architecture is so much better the AMD processors still fall far behind in performance...
Thanks Again!
Best,
Terry
(while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache) ??? then it´s not a quad core access......except for the AMD sharing L3 across all 4 cores, while with Intel each pair of cores has a separate cache....
intel said and write the last year that they can not do a "real" quad cpu today... this test numbers are good because the sacrificate a lot of "better" options for a good cpu... for have a good result on integer numbers test... and good retro compatible system operation 32-64 bits...
but a powerpc, in fact the cpu power6 it´s a lot of better cpu that intel... this cpu (powe6, IBM), is use on servers, hp, sun, etc... and have this:
in the paper, and in the real work, IBM power6 is a lot of better cpu, have better results floating point, and in integer too when power6 runs 4,7 Ghz...PowerXCell 8i 3200 MHz (12.8 GFlops)
(los PowerxCell del Roadrunner dan 12.8 gigaflops).
procesador Core 2 Duo E6700 - 12-13 gigaflops
3 GHz PowerPC G5 processors with over 35 gigaflops of processing power per system.
As of 2008, the PC (quad-core) perform over 51 GFLOPS(QX9775).
The CPU will run at speeds between 4-5GHz with a total of 8Mbytes L2 cache and a 75Gbyte/second link to external memory.
The Power6 doubles the frequency and bandwidth of the existing Power5 without increasing its power consumption or the depth of its execution pipeline. The move lets IBM ship the chip as a mid-2007 refresh for its existing p-series server line.
IBM may surpass Intel in the speed race, although it has not determined exact speeds for shipping parts yet. Intel currently ships versions of its single-core Pentium running at up to 3.8GHz, but it slows its dual-core CPUs down to 2.93GHz or less to keep power and heat in check.
Actually from rythie's post, a 4.7 GHz POWER6 running a single thread seems to be ~= 3.5 GHz Core 2 in integer, and ~= 4.2 GHz Core 2 in floating point. That's pretty good IPC.
Add in the second thread on that core and the per-core IPC might even be higher than Core 2 in floating point, although this is purely speculative and assuming that there is an overall improvement of 20% when running the second thread (no way do I think IBM's SMP implementation is going to suck like HyperThreading).
Power 6 performs like a Core Duo(Yonah) in integer except it runs at 4.7GHz. It is really impressive. I estimate Intel needs a 3.7GHz Core 2 in SpecInt2006 and 5.2GHz Core 2 in SpecFP2006 to equal the 4.7GHz Power 6. Power 6 has better performance per clock in FP than Core 2. Sure, Power 6 does have massive bandwidth advantage so if we assume the same happens for Core 2, Core 2 should gain performance advantage per clock in SpecFP2006.
The 8-core results show a 4.7GHz POWER6 getting over twice the scores (both int_rate and fp_rate) of an 8-core 3GHz Opteron system (which beat the 8-core Xeon system and an 8-core 1.6GHz Itanium system).
and the next... power7. run with 4 or 8 REAL Cores... small cache for core, and big cache for "all" cores...
alone intel makes patches, good patches to go throwing with retro-compatibility. but they sacrifice a lot for it... they sacrifice results in floating point, (for have to decent results on integer), it consumes energy, and speed in Ghz... the are very slowly... compare with power6... (power 6 is expensive, linux system ?, or IBM system, and have a lot of power of to count peas ...

all the foundations of the new intel processors, are a patch, to go throwing 2 or 3 years...
why intel is good sales ? because is cheap very. only that. offers cpus.
intel have not a real cpu quad.. ( do the domestic market need that ?)
amd have goods ideas, but that are some problems to "up" speed in Ghz... but the concepts are better for future desings... only need "more speed"... and some better chipset MB... only need more TIME... intel would be died if AMD and IBM go to de domestic market with masive paralel cpus... and better designs...
but this need a good system program software... and good programs that permit use correctly the masive cpu cores... ( with small ¡ cache ¡¡)
the designs with a lot of cpu have small cache for core... to get a good ratio of speed among them...
AMD is better for futute..
IBM power6 ans power7 are the BEST for now.
PD: only need good programs... and programers... ( with dual-quad-octo-neurons in his brains...

in the servers cpu market , the results are very diferents...
bye, from spain. oliver.
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Re: Expert Opinions: I was informed by a computer 'Geek' ...
There shouldn't be too much surprise that there's skepticism of Intel marketing claims. After all, this is the company that told us that hyperthreading in the Pentium IV was just like having two processors. Yeah, more like 1.15 processors, and that's on a good day.