VIA Nano Bests Intel Atom In Netbook Benchmarks 130
Glib Piglet writes "ZDNet UK has a whole set of benchmarks comparing a 1.8 GHz Nano in VIA's Epia SN motherboard and a 1.6 GHz Atom in Intel's 'Little Falls' D945GCFL mobo. It's not good news for Chipzilla: 'As far as memory performance is concerned, the Nano is clearly superior in every test' and 'The VIA Nano emerges as the better processor for internet tasks. While the Atom needs 132.8 seconds to display simple HTML pages, the Nano does it in 70.1 seconds.' The Nano even outperforms Nehalem on one test. It's not all a win for VIA, though. The benchmark concludes that in some ways all netbooks, underpowered as they are, remain in the IT stone ages."
Hmm. (Score:1, Informative)
Intel Atom 330 turns the tables though (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=664 [pcper.com]
The benchmarks for the new Atom 330, dual-core HyperThreaded CPU seem to turn the tides though.
The Nano has ALWAYS been a better CPU than the Atom but that doesn't seem to matter when it comes to the push that Intel has...
Re:132 seconds to display simple HTML page? (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know what the hell kind of webpage they were trying to display... I have an Acer Netbook with the Atom in it, running Windows 7. It renders slashdot, ars, and even facebook, within 3 seconds or so...
Re:132 seconds to display simple HTML page? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:All but the important test (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Is that really a win? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:All but the important test (Score:4, Informative)
Re:First Post (Score:5, Informative)
I don't believe you.
While the Atom needs 132.8 seconds to display simple HTML pages, the Nano does it in 70.1 seconds.
With those speeds, why do they call these things "netbooks?" :)
Very large web page. 17 seconds on an e5200 (That's a 2.5Ghz Core2Duo).
I had a feeling the second I learned the Atom was an In-Order processor that it was going to suck. Sure enough, it feels rather sluggish. Getting a dual core + dual threaded Atom might be better.
VIA's documentation is a nightmare to trudge through. Their hardware is usually great, but designing a product around it tends to be very difficult. With Intel, OTOH, we usually have no trouble getting a hold of an engineer if we have questions. Poor VIA...we'd love to use their chip but their support just isn't dependable when we have deadlines to meet.
I hope the netbook crowd (Acer esp) can muscle some legit documentation from them-- I'd take the Nano over the Atom any day.
Re:All but the important test (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Intel Atom 330 turns the tables though (Score:2, Informative)
The benchmarks for the new Atom 330, dual-core HyperThreaded CPU seem to turn the tides though.
Atom 330 benchmarks have been out for months, and Intel is limiting it to desktops.
Re:132 seconds to display simple HTML page? (Score:5, Informative)
"While the Atom needs 132.8 seconds to display simple HTML pages, the Nano does it in 70.1 seconds."
Whoosh?
Re:All but the important test (Score:3, Informative)
...50% more? since when? Sure, the Nano may use more power, but it's nowhere near 50% more. 60.1*1.5 is 90.15, and x2 it's 120.2. The Nano tops out at 77.5. Making up bullshit is not "interesting" or "insightful".
You should investigate further before you claim bullshit.
In fact, the OP was quite generous to Nano. The 1.8 GHz Nano is rated (by Via) at 25W TDP (Thermal Design Power). The 1.6 GHz Atom 230 (desktop version) is rated (by Intel) at 4W TDP, the N270 (1.6 GHz netbook version) at 2.5W, and the latest N280 (1.666 GHz netbook) is a mere 2.0W. I'm sure Intel and Via use slightly different methods for measuring TDP, but not that different, you know?
Nano doesn't seem to have separate desktop and netbook versions. If you want the highest speed grade Nano in your netbook, you're going to be putting in a CPU which draws 12.5x as much power as the N280.
Re: the PC Perspective review you linked, you need to be aware that (1) PCPER measured whole-system power consumption, not the processor by itself, and (2) Intel's Atom desktop boards ship with an extremely old integrated graphics chipset which uses so much power that it actually requires a fan (the Atom CPU itself doesn't). Go back to your link and scroll down to the graph of entire-system power consumption during MP3 encode. Notice how the Atom's graph is nearly flat, going up by only ~3W during activity? That's because in this case, even at full load, the CPU accounts for a vanishingly small percentage of the total system power.
The story's a bit different in netbook land, where Intel will sell you a different version of the CPU with a more modern chipset. The netbook version features a reduced power variant of Intel's standard front-side bus. (The 'desktop' version of the Atom uses the normal Intel FSB, which increases its TDP and makes it compatible with the ancient chipset mentioned above.) The total TDP of an Atom N270 plus the netbook chipset (north+south bridge) is about 12W, less than half the TDP of the top speed bin Nano CPU all by itself.
The Nano's problem in a nutshell: its ULV low clocked versions still uses much more power than even the fastest single core Atom variants (5W TDP @ 1.0 GHz is the wimpiest version Via lists), but then loses its performance advantage. The high clock rate versions which destroy Atom in performance benchmarks use about as much power as a low or midrange Core 2 Duo. But even if you disable one core, a C2D is going to completely destroy the Nano in any benchmark. The only advantage Nano has over C2D for a CPU in the ~15-25W TDP power class is really low idle power consumption (500mW for the top 1.8 GHz speed bin, 100mW for the rest).
Unfortunately for Via, that advantage has not proven compelling enough for any manufacturer of portable computers to jump on the Nano. And it has literally no advantages for netbooks, where you never want a CPU over 10W. Via's been trying to get design wins for a long time now, and nobody's biting.
Oh, and there's one other problem they face: they might try to buy design wins by pricing it really low to make up for its shortcomings, but that's a game they can't win. Nano's die is ~63mm^2, Atom's is ~26mm^2. They can probably sell cheaper than a 45nm Core 2 Duo (82mm^2 for 3MB L2 cache variants), but not enough to make up for the C2D's vastly better performance within the same thermal envelope.
Bullshit! (Score:3, Informative)
And still, your whole dissertation -- which apparently comes straight out of your uninformed ass -- is completely useless,
since the Atom can only be so low in power usage, because all the power-draining stuff is in the north-bridge!
Have you ever looked at a board with an Atom CPU? The thing with the big fat cooler is the north-bridge. That what looks like the north-bridge is the actual Atom CPU!
And if you take the sum of the power those two chips need, they lose to every "netbook CPU"! By far...
But as long as there are parrots and retards who think because they can pull it out of their ass, it must be true, Intel will do just fine, selling its fraud chips. And you are directly responsible for that fraud too. So thank you... really... (NOT!)