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Well have you guys been seeing all the exciting new Intel news lately? :P Bet you have, bet you have, nudge nudge, wink wink! :)

 

Intel have confirmed Dual-Core Atom processors coming in September - with a new 945GCLF2 motherboard. Also the Quad-core notebook processors also coming round about then - some have been spotted in the wild already! (extremesystems has one!)

 

Nehalem details are coming thick and fast. Still don't know exactly when it's launching, but not too long now!

Intel have demonstrated the upcoming Nehalem based mobile platform - due Q3 2009 - called Calpella or Centrino 3.

 

Lots of other stuff - too numerous to mention - 22nm memory chip samples demonstrated, new SSDs, 6-core server processors etc. etc. etc.

 

Chipzilla is really on a roll here! ;)

 

Lastly some price drops & a few new models from intel coming out at the end of the month! , I'm excited about the E5200 Pentium dual-core!

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Pour AMD guys... will they manage to survive this time?

 

Of course they will. AMD's like a bum who was given a million dollars by a Bill Gates. They were homeless before, then they were rich for a few weeks, and now are back on the street after blowing all their money. Nothing new to see here; they've been playing this game for 40 years. They'll always scrape by.

They seem intent on putting back hyperthreading in Nehalem. Why do pseudo-multi-threading on 4 cores when most software doesn't even do true mult-threading yet on 2? At least they're still reducing power consumption. That's what put an end to the Prescott/Northwood/Coppermine/Tejas line.

 

I hope AMD sticks around. I'd never buy one of their chips but the competition helps keep Intel on their toes.

The reason why hyperthreading is seen as important, especially on the Atoms, is because by letting 2 applications process data simultaneously (even with virtual cores) makes the system feel snappier, at the cost of some grunt. So a low end Atom converting some audio with Hyperthreading allows other apps to run at the same time without bogging the system down, but the audio will take more time to decode. It's literally 2 'cores' on 1 core, but of course since there is only 1 core, performance takes a hit for the expense of perceived performance.

 

Thats how I heard it goes, anyway.

I highly doubt that amd will ever go bankrupt. I get they will be around as long as intel because they don't just specialize in cpu's for consumer. They also build tiny micro processors and memory controllers for electronics. I had an internship this summer and their were amd parts on a sound device that was being made for the military. Talk about cool, have you heard of any intel products being used for this sort of thing?

I read the Anandtech article on Nehalem. Very interesting. It appears that Nehalem is going to be positioned as a server chip. They think gamers - an important but small niche - will have to wait for the post-Nehalem architecture to see any significant improvements. There is a graph that shows better performance for video encoding and rendering apps, but the article says other realms of non-server software will see perhaps a 10-15% gain in speed.

 

To me, that's not really exciting unless you're running a server.

I read the Anandtech article on Nehalem. Very interesting. It appears that Nehalem is going to be positioned as a server chip. They think gamers - an important but small niche - will have to wait for the post-Nehalem architecture to see any significant improvements. There is a graph that shows better performance for video encoding and rendering apps, but the article says other realms of non-server software will see perhaps a 10-15% gain in speed.

 

To me, that's not really exciting unless you're running a server.

 

Although, if one looks at it, MacPros are servers. They have been using a server-based architecture and one does generally see them in use for video encoding, rendering, and other thread-intensive multimedia applications.

 

I can personally wait for the post-Nehalem architecture if it means better performance in games. It will give me more time to save up some spare cash for both a real MacPro and a custom-built kick ass gaming machine.

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