P4 3.2GHz Reviews 296
Nathan writes "The Intel 3.2GHz Pentium4 has passed its NDA with reviews coming out over the net, including this one at MBReview, This one at HardAvenue, This one at TweakTown and this review at HotHW." Yay. Benchmarks. Wowee-zowee.
Mock! (Score:5, Funny)
"I also reserve the right to mock you for paying $300 for an extra 200MHz." -- Scott Wasson, TechReport.
Re:Mock! (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, this is becoming rarer and rarer, but it still exists.
Re:Mock! (Score:3, Insightful)
There's still some problems which can't be easily split that way -- but then, people who have those probably aren't crunching them on PC hardware.
Re:Mock! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mock! (Score:3, Funny)
And, no, that's not called overclocking. It's called not underclocking
(Interesting thing: my old harddrive would not be recognized with the clock up at full speed. Well, that one crashed - yay IBM! - and with the new one, I just remembered I could get an extra 300Mhz this morning =)
Re:Mock! (Score:2)
Purchasing Cycles (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Purchasing Cycles (Score:4, Insightful)
That is short sighted. Paying an extra $300 just for a little more speed, in the long run, just means that the budget to upgrade is higher than it could have been, so it will happen more infrequently, without other external economic influences of course.
Re:Purchasing Cycles (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the rationale I hear for buying expensive hardware from Sun or SGI (and I agree, for the most part). I've never heard it used to justify buying Intel's latest offering - PCs are retired quicker than any other platform. If you really need to make a crappy PC workstation last for ten years, you're better off buying a cheaper box, like a 2.4Ghz P4 (which isn't slow by any means), and use all the money you save to purchase spare boxes or parts. You'll definitely need them if you want to keep the system going for ten years.
I know from experience that there are few things more annoying than trying to squeeze the last bit of life out of PCs that have been obsolete and off warranty for two years. . . sometimes, when the moon is out, I can still hear those IBM Pentium 90s calling my name.
Re:Purchasing Cycles (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mock! (Score:2)
This remark is a little ignorant. If cpu time is the only resource your application needs, and it happens to be parallelizable, then you buy whatever gives you the most cpu throughput per buck.
If your application needs other resources as well, such as lots of memory and disk space, then the cpu cost accounts only for a small part of the total processing cost, but may still be the bottleneck for the j
Re:isn't it more than that, (Score:2, Informative)
Stuff that matters. (Score:5, Insightful)
If it isn't important, if it doesn't matter, then don't post it.
Re:Stuff that matters. (Score:4, Insightful)
If it isn't important [to you], if it doesn't matter [to you], then don't read it.
See? Easy-peasy.
Re:Stuff that matters. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Stuff that matters. (Score:2)
Fair enough. However, I believe the aside was directed toward the general [lack of] value of benchmarks, and not really at the article itself. Benchmarks are usually awful gauges of real-world performance, so I can see his point. OTOH, they can give fanboys additional bragging room because their processors are
And yet... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And yet... (Score:2, Interesting)
*doesn't click link* (Score:5, Funny)
Do I win a prize??
Re:*doesn't click link* (Score:2)
You forgot: Uses more power, generates more heat.
Who is Intel trying to impress? (Score:4, Funny)
What happened to the days when CPU's would take their time, and get the jobs done the right way.
It's not like it can make your PC scream any faster or louder, or can it?
Meh (Score:5, Insightful)
64bit for the consumer and the world's most beautiful OS or a meagre increase for a 32bit chip with Microsoft Windows. I know what I'll pick...
iqu
Re:Meh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Meh (Score:2)
Still, that's not to say you can't do interesting things with it. Imagine an OS in which every object is conceivable mapped into the address space at once, with the hard disk simply backing it mmap style. It'd require a totally new OS design to make it work, but I think you could do some cool stuff with such a beast. No more file IO!
Re:Meh (Score:2, Funny)
"people"
Re:Meh (Score:5, Funny)
kill consumers, consumers kill consumers"?
Re:Meh (Score:2)
Re:Meh (Score:2)
The potential for huge performance increases in games (I'm thinking Doom III of course) is massive.
How does that work? Doom III is not 64bit software, so would have to be run in 32bit mode anyway.
Re:Meh (Score:2, Interesting)
As regards the 32bit vs 64bit issue, I think you only need to look at some of the performance figures to see that the PPC chips give some serious competition to Intel. 64bit chips process twice as much information as 32bit chips - this is more than just a memory-addressing thing.
As you will see, clock-for-clock, they can blow x86 out of the wat
Re:Meh (Score:2)
As regards the 32bit vs 64bit issue, I think you only need to look at some of the performance figures to see that the PPC chips give some serious competition to Intel.
This is entirely offtopic, bu
Re:Meh (Score:4, Interesting)
Someone somewhere else on this thread sarcastically suggested that I was simply assuming 64bit to be twice the speed of 32bit.
Well, at one point you said "64 bit processors can process twice as much data as 32 bit processors", or words to that affect. Which is a pretty meaningless statement without a time reference.
However, 64bit quite clearly is the future, and whether x86 or PPC is your architecture, it's where we're going.
Sure. Eventually. In much the same way that ipv6 is the future.
surely the ability to fetch 64bits of data at a time rather than just 32bits is going to speed things up?
I'm pretty sure that the rate CPUs read from memory is actually limited by things like memory bandwidth and speed. I think most CPUs already fetch memory speculatively in chunks of 128bits or more, so I doubt that'd make much difference.
You also have to remember that the size of the pointer type doubles. That can actually decrease efficiency - as pointed out in the article linked to in a sibling post, a lot of computation involves linked list traversal. The increased pointer size would cause greater amounts of data to need to be processed.
It is quite clear from your posting history that you do not like Macs
Well this is the interesting thing. I don't have much against Macs themselves, other than a general dislike of proprietary platforms (but the same is true of Windows or Solaris for instance). It's more the attitude of some (unfortunately the most vocal) Mac users that annoys me. A lot of, well, to be frank inaccurate things are said about Apple and their products, and it's a big turnoff.
It's especially annoying when people work themselves into a frenzy then treat a corporation and its product almost like a religion. So that's where a lot of my "anti-Mac" viewpoint comes from, not in fact the technology or even the company themselves (though apple have done their fair share of shady things) - just the blind loyalty of its users.
Re:Meh (Score:3, Interesting)
Other than high-resolution timestamps, nobody uses 64-bit integers for anything. In the real world, 64-bit quantities are used for floating point numbers and address pointers. The X86 architecture has had 80-bit floating point for 20 years now. In fact, it has had 128-bit wide multimedia processing logic for the last 7 years.
64 bits is just a memory addressing thing. However, unless the worki
Re:Meh (Score:2)
x86ers would like it very much if 64bit wasn't relevant for the consumer, because they're not going to get it for a little while yet, but in truth, it really is huge. The potential for huge performance increases in games (I'm thinking Doom III of course) is massive.
Care to elaborate why Doom III or actually any current non-server-programs will benefit from 64bit?
I've seen simulations of molecules which can suck up all the memory you throw at them (and all the CPU time). You can use lots of memory when d
Re:Meh (Score:2)
Yes, FASTER?
Re:Meh (Score:2)
Re:Meh (Score:3, Interesting)
And the other 95% of computer users will pick the cheaper 32-bit Intel chip running Windows. What's your point? You're willing to pay an enormous premium for very little gain? The average consumer isn't going to see a difference between a 32-bit CPU and a 64-bit CPU other than one is going to be more expensive and perhaps run a bit faster. In 6 months the 32-b
Re:Meh (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, it's true that the masses will probably stick to what is cheaper. It's what they're always gonna do, and that's fine, because most people just want Office and maybe the occasional game. Apple will never really penetrate that market.
But this is Slashdot. We demand more from our machines here. We want high speed UNIX boxen and game stations that we can frag at 150 fps on, and if we're lucky, both at the same time.
The bit about binary compatibility shows that you know nothing about Macs. The PPC 970 _is_ backwards compatible with all the old software - everything will run! And the best thing is, as has always been the case with Macs, backwards compatibility is unrivalled. Macs of today still feature Motorola 68k emulation so that they can run software written for those chips, for OS 9 and for OS X.
Windows XP (the equivalent of OS X in terms of consumer accessibility and reliability), on the other hand, has terrible backwards compatibility, and I find that many, many, many old DOS or even Windows programs will not run...
I rest my case.
iqu
Re:Meh (Score:2)
I thought Office and the occaisional game were available for OSX.
Re:Meh (Score:5, Informative)
Well, iirc Classic mode is basically running the complete OS 9 in a VM. But by this logic, Windows is perfectly backwards compatable because you can run any previous version inside VMware.
So, to measure how backwards compatable an OS is, running complete old versions inside a VM is to me cheating. You should test how well old apps run in the same environment as modern apps. By this measure, Windows scores pretty well.
Re:Meh (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, for this darling operating system of yours - Microsoft Windows. We have VMware, at a cost of $299, and Bochs at a cost of nothing but the speed of a slug. In addition, I would point out that my experience of running DOS games on VMware (aside from th
Re:Meh (Score:2, Interesting)
You obviously haven't seen the specs on the 970 yet.
Heck, if I remember correctly they've done it twice so far going from Motorola 68k chips to PowerPC and then from OS 9 to OS X.
No. you don't remember correctly. The move from 68k to powerpc was pretty smooth, and very few were left in the dust. And the move from OS 9 to X hasn't been perfect, but apple has retained great compatibility, and the carbon api made it possible for developers
Re:Meh (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Meh (Score:2, Interesting)
Predictable? (Score:2, Informative)
Heck, you'll be able to "predict" the next few releases as well!
AMD? (Score:2, Interesting)
And you get x86 compatability too. I'll leave it upto the reader if that is a good/bad thing!
*From inside intel* (Score:5, Funny)
Intel Employee #1: We can't make our design any better! Intel Employee #2: Surely you jest. Intel Employee #1: No, but I have an idea. Intel Employee #2: What? I'm clueless! Intel Employee #1: Lets up the clock speed! Intel Employee #2: Touche!
(note this is not meant to be a flame, just a little humor)
German Reviews (Score:3, Informative)
Looks, as there is no chance for an AMD 3200+ Systeme to win a round. Hope it will change with the athlon 64
Buying other items with small performance increase (Score:5, Funny)
Picture this....
Salesman: and this toaster makes toast .5 seconds faster
Me: great, how much?
Salesman: its double the price of the standard model
Me: Hmmmm
Re:Buying other items with small performance incre (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Buying other items with small performance incre (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Buying other items with small performance incre (Score:5, Interesting)
Sort of like getting either a cluster of cheap middle-performing x86 boxes, or a big-iron type machine from Sun or IBM, come to think about it.
I mean, how many apps really critically need that 2% parformance increase, but do not benefit from a dual or quad-cpu machine, a cluster, or a big non-x86 Unix machine?
Re:Buying other items with small performance incre (Score:2)
A quad-cpu machine with the new CPU will still be faster than a quad-cpu machine with the old CPUs.
When you run thousands of jobs on a hundred dual-cpu machines overnight, 10% increase in speed is significant! It means hundreds more completed jobs per night.
When the fastest available is too slow, then any increase in speed is quite welcom
Re:Buying other items with small performance incre (Score:3, Funny)
obligatory Red Dwarf quote (Score:2)
Where's the Pentium 5? (Score:5, Interesting)
(Yes, fellow pedants, I am aware that "Pentium" was used for the chip following the 486, as Intel couldn't copyright a number and stop their competitors using the term "586".)
Seriously though, how long have successive generations of Pentium technology lasted? Is it just me, or was the PIII the primary product line for longer than the PII, and when will the P4 break the PIII's record?
Boring? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yay. Benchmarks. Wowee-zowee.
If it's that boring, why include it on the main page as a story?
My Review (Score:5, Funny)
Integer performance has increased by (New Speed-OldSpeed)/OldSpeed * (OldBenchmark Score) - OldBenchMarkScore, as has floating point. However, the electricity bill also rose by the same percentage.
Pros: No one ever got fired for buying Intel!
Cons: It costs more than a used car!
Re:My Review (Score:2)
Everyone complains when they up the clock speed up by
Re:My Review (Score:2)
Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:4, Insightful)
For most people when processors hit 750 mhz that was enough for them. And then MS released XP but that only raised the stakes a slight bit. 1.2 ghz is enough for 90% of people out there!
Yet some people still crave speed, I have an aunt who does nowt more than send a few emails a month and play minesweeper and (much to my annoyance as I may use it for maybe 5% of my tasks) she has a faster cpu than me!
On a side note, what's happeneing with AMD these days? they seem to really be losing it at the high end, it terms of both value and performance. there 3200 seems only about as good as a p4 2800 of so.
Still they still are the better choice at the same end of the pricing scale below the curve of insanity!
Personally I'd much prefer some nice advances in some other area, cpu's are dull these days and I doubt 64 bit will convince me otherwise.
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure. Until the next release of (insert favourite OS here) is out. At which point it'll have more eyecandy, be working harder in the background and users will be pushing it harder without even realising it.
Trivial example - I like antialiased text. It sucks CPU power. Well seeing as I couldn't actually buy a CPU slower than a gigahertz when I last looked around, that's not such a big deal anymore.
And anyway there's a lot of times when you want speed just
Just like my modem (Score:2)
now I have a 2 meg ADSL connection and it could do to be a bit faster sometimes.
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:2, Interesting)
How 'bout it.
I was helping my sister out this weekend. She had a machine I had built for her a while ago using a PII-450 that she was using as a print server (she's a Mac user, but has a designjet and she wanted a server on her home network to run some remote proofing software).
Anyway, she had me come over because she "needed up upgrade" the machine. She was trying to install some new printing software tha
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:2)
hell for the price of that chip I can build a SMP system that would make it look silly... even with the less than 50% increase in speed the SMP system gives per processor.
if you want pure speed and power... SMP is the way to go...
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:2, Interesting)
It works like this.
#1. Uber game comes out.
#2. Your hardware sucks, you buy a new comp.
#3. Next Uber game comes out.
#4. Your hardware sucks, you buy a new comp.
etc....
Unfortunately, Computer game technology hasn't been pushing the limits of hardware lately.
(Maybe it's because the Gaming companies got smart and realized that the more platforms that ca
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone really care anymore? (Score:3, Insightful)
I Care. Now stop asking, dammit. (Score:2, Insightful)
While not earth-shattering news this is still good news for people who use computers for more than an excuse not to interact with live humans.
Yet every single time th
Other reviews (Score:4, Informative)
Nothing fancy, move along (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing newsworthy in that really.
So what's the real news? (Score:5, Interesting)
However, this processor does seems very suitable for overclocking (4GHz, yikes!). Did anyone manage to come close to that with the 3GHz model, or has Intel increased the therapeutical window of their processors slightly?
Re:So what's the real news? (Score:2)
Given a $200 difference between the 3.06 and the 3.2, something tells me that sticking in $200 more RAM, a better video card, or upgrading the hard drives to a SATA RAID 0 setup would give way better ROI (better performance gains) than the theoretical 4.5% gain the CPU would give. For even better than that, use the $200 to upgrade the monitor from a 19 inch CRT to an 18
Powerbook (Score:3, Insightful)
performance (Score:2, Insightful)
Where are the real benchmarks (Score:3, Interesting)
Brief benchmark rant (Score:4, Insightful)
Ok, I have a small rant concerning benchmarks. I'm in the sciences and often look at graphs of data. I am getting SO TIRED of benchmark results being posted with y-axes that go from 2500 to 2600 showing the relative "improvement" of newer, faster cpu's when they ought to be scaled from 0 to X "mips", "flops" or whatevers so that you can see at a glance that the changes are or are not significant.
Better yet are plots showing how much they have "improved" relative to simple clock speed increases (if at all!) and normalized "mips/dollar" for cost evaluation....
Re:Brief benchmark rant (Score:3, Funny)
Somewhere an Intel marketing-droid dies from a laughter-buffer overflow.
Other sources (Score:5, Informative)
One example of 64bit gaming benefits (Score:4, Interesting)
This as opposed to the good old days with a 64 byte array containing 1 for the white queen, 2 for the white pawns etc.
Bitboards really benefit from 64bit registers and 64bit (integer) arithmetic.
Re:One example of 64bit gaming benefits (Score:2)
babelfish translation of this /. post (Score:4, Funny)
from the cut-and-paste dept.
Nathan writes "Someone else [mbreview.com] asked us to redirect traffic to their site. We [hardavenue.com] told them [hothardware.com] of course. [tweaktown.com]"
Processor design needs to change. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Processor design needs to change. (Score:2, Interesting)
Look, there's a simple underlying reason that we need/want higher clock rates, fsb's, etc. Games, 3D animation, multi-track audio, and any number of other things *require* some serious processing power. It's that bloody simple. If you want to te
Re:Processor design needs to change. (Score:5, Interesting)
No Tom's? (Score:3, Interesting)
"Intel launches the last P4, with 3.2 GHz for FSB800 and Dual DDR400. Its rival AMD fights back with the Athlon XP 3200+ and Dual DDR400. With the Pentium 5 and Athlon 64 waiting in the wings, it's a historic duel." [tomshardware.com]
FutureMark's lost reputation (Score:4, Interesting)
Next up, weâ(TM)ll be taking a look at FutureMark's 3DMark2001SE. With the recent debacle surrounding NVIDIA and FutureMark, I have chosen to exclude 3DMark2003 from our benchmarking suite for those of you wondering why you arenâ(TM)t seeing any results for it. (from here [mbreview.com])
We've all read how NVIDIA fiddled with the results and how FutureMark became complacent with it. Now here's the result.
You don't need that fast of a computer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Feh to the naysayers (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Feh to the naysayers (Score:3, Funny)
--
Re:Overclocked (Score:5, Informative)
I dunno why people focus so much on CPU benchmarks. Why can't I have a faster BIOS? I want a machine that passes control to the OS bootloader in under a second. Instead, if anything, it takes longer and longer with every machine I try - a second or two staring at the NVidia copyright notice, a few more seconds staring at the bios, quick memory check, autodetect devices. Some system info, some beeps, some whirrs, some clicks, then finally the OS starts loading. Of course that takes ages as well.
If we are capable of making such insanely fast pieces of electronics, why the hell is the rest so slow?
Re:Overclocked (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Overclocked (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not the "general sheep public" that does that; it's the hardware fanboy types who build giant cooling systems and drool over benchmarks posted to hardware fanboy sites (like Tom's). The "general sheep public" no longer cares about upgrading.
Re:Overclocked (Score:2)
How about a true speed performance by making "real" solid state drives affordable? (real meaning on CF or USB drives) It would increase speed, lower temperatures, and best of all, quiet down things.
Hopefully with SATA we may see more of a push for solid state drives rather then just making the drives spin faster and putting more cache onto them.
Granted, this is not Intels cup of tea, but they could rea
Re:Overclocked (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Overclocked (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Athlon still better. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Athlon still better. (Score:3, Insightful)
Look at the price performance ratio though, you can build a whole AMD based PC for the cost of high end P4 processors.
Re:Athlon still better. (Score:2)
Re:Editor on crack? (Score:3, Funny)
or the expanded dictionary entry:
1. Exhibiting a lack of wisdom or good sense; foolish. Otherwise known as "Slashdot effect"
2. Steve Ballmer on stage.
3. Al Gore attempting humor.
Antonym: Steve Jobs Reality Distortion Field.
Re:Great news (Score:2, Interesting)