K6-3 on Monday 135
This Monday, AMD will unveil the K6-3 at
400 and 450 MHz. The chip will have an on-chip 256k L2 cache, and
will go in existing Super 7 motherboard. The chip will probably top
out at 500 MHz shortly, but the chip should be produced into Y2K.
The chip reputedly performs like Pentium *3* of equivalent
clock, or even outperforms it with enough cache. People
like me have a decision to make - I have a K6-2 333 with 1MB of
L2 cache, and need to decide whether or not I should save up
for a K7 (hopefully SMP...) or just go for it and buy a K6-3. Thank
William Rhodes for the heads up
Alphas are cheaper - it's dos barnacles stupid (Score:1)
What do ya do, that.. (Score:1)
... run Slashdot.org.
:)
Hmmm... decisions decisions. (Score:1)
GO AMD!!! (Score:1)
A fool and his money... (Score:1)
- A.P.
--
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
Hmmm... decisions decisions. (Score:1)
I'm definitely at the point where I want more horsepower - so these articles on Slashdot are very interesting.
Does this new AMD chip do floating point anywhere near decent? Is it going to ever catch up with the Intel line in terms of FP power, or am I just better off sticking with Intel for my FP-hungry apps?
I don't know too much about the non-Intel alternatives... I got this PPro/200 a few years ago because it was the best thing for my music stuff... if there's an alternative, I'd sure like to know.
Thanks for the info... (Score:1)
In the meantime, might be interesting to overclock my PPro, if it's possible...
OCing the PPro200 (Score:1)
It _WAS_ FUD. (Score:1)
It _WAS_ FUD. (Score:1)
Alphas are cheaper - it's dos barnacles stupid (Score:1)
It has always been backward compatiblty that has kept intel in business (and Microsoft for that matter). So you can keep all that big investment in software that you have. If it wasn't for that we all would have macs on our desks and intel would be a company that made toasters.
K6-2 Tip for non-experts... good idea (Score:1)
You should use silicon grease. The reason for this is that it removes all the tiny air bubbles that prevent heat transfer from the chip to the heatsink.
On chip 256k cache? (Score:1)
tugrul
Bullshit cuts both ways... (Score:1)
The computational kernels for all of these algorithms are very easy to optimize for any given cache size and number of CPU's (and, for that matter, number of floating point units). If the code you used was optimized for 256K or 512K of cache and whatever cache algorithm the PII uses it doesn't surprise me that it runs badly on a Celeron A. 128K should be enough cache to get decent performance from a matrix multiply.
The FFT's an interesting case, since the radix 2 kernel only uses about 5 flops, so a lot of people use radix 4 and 8 kernels to reduce memory (or cache) traffic. Of course, the x86 FPU architecture gets in the way here; there simply aren't enough registers and the stack architecture's all wrong. Radix 8 and vectorized radix 2 and 4 kernels are an interesting exercise in register and pipeline management. Then there are the twiddles (nth roots of 1). So OK, I'll grant that the FFT is more cache intensive, but there are clever ways to tune it for different cache sizes.
In any event, I would not pick any x86 architecture for large FFT's. For more typical 1024 point FFT's, though, the Celeron has enough cache (128K is enough for about 8K complex points; divide that by 4 to allow for the twiddle factors and other cache busting stuff, and you're still at 2K). But again, the FPU architecture is all wrong.
give me a freaking break (Score:1)
If quality always won we wouldn't have
Microsoft and we wouldn't have this bloody
x86 architecture that really stinks!
I always thought that the Motorola 680x0
was better, and I'm sure there were a lot
of other good alternatives out there.
CPU speed mistaken for graphics speed. (Score:1)
There's a sweet irony... (Score:1)
shipping x86 chips, considering that the Xeons
not only have integrated L2 cache, but they have
more of it than the K6-3?
Now, the fastest *reasonably priced* x86 CPU
is another matter entirely.
Games. (Score:1)
Games.
Not enough cache (Score:1)
underclocking (Score:1)
Yay.
What do ya do, that.. (Score:1)
Daniel
What is the best heat transfer compound ? (Score:1)
Thanks
K8 (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
give me a freaking break (Score:1)
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
kewl (Score:1)
Better get dual celery's (Score:1)
K6-3s are not openpic either. They will not SMP at all.
(Well, not without a whole lot of glue logic added)
No problems with Cyrix (Score:1)
I knew a lot less about motherboards back then, too, and could probably have picked a more stable one. BCM sucks!
my 2 cents...
-k
Tired of FUD (Score:1)
two years and have never had a single problem.
And I still get people asking me if I trust the
AMD chips instead of Intel. I am sick beyond belief of the "Intel is the real x86" garbage,
especially when Intel releases a chip like the
PIII that is all hype and no performance and then
pushes it with with idiotic commercials saying it
will "Make the Internet more fun." WTF!?!?? Get a
grip, Intel is not the only CPU manufacturer that has a clue.
Better get dual celery's (Score:1)
2) K7's are not Super7, they are SlotA and have an entierly different chipset.
---------------------------------
Were you dropped as a child. (Score:1)
The K5 is a totally different chip (Score:1)
Better get dual celery's (Score:1)
Better get dual celery's (Score:1)
Smooth. (Score:1)
AMD is really giving Intel a run for its money. Best of luck to them.
Plus, those K6 chips LOOK cool..
give me a freaking break (Score:1)
Well, I can counter that with my own experience.
Before upgrading my machine with a K6-2/300 in an EPOX/MVP3C mainboard, I tried some Intel chips in another series of mainboards. I had nothing but trouble with the Intel junk.
This K6-2/300 has never frozen, never failed to boot, never failed to detect devices, and so on. The AMD K6-2 is the best CPU I have ever had.
I'm waiting for K7 (Score:1)
Hmmm... decisions decisions. (Score:1)
I read on CMP the P IIs have just a single pipeline structure and the K7s will have a dual pipeline stucutre combined with L1 and L2 cache and a 200 mhz bus to make it just fly past P IIIs.
K6-3 could be a GREAT gaming machine (Score:1)
Unlike the Celeron A's with their 128 KB L2 cache, the K6-3's 256 KB L2 cache has already shown superior performance for the same clock speed as opposed to the Pentium II/III series. For example, if you're running Quake II with the 3DNow! drivers, a K6-3 will result in performance that is actually _better_ than a Pentium II at the same 450 MHz, if www.anandtech.com's website claims are true. It'll be interesting to see if we will see patches for Quake II that will take advantage of the Pentium III; if that's the case, it'll be a VERY close contest indeed.
What do ya do, that.. (Score:1)
uh huh... (Score:1)
Damn, some people. You'd think people who are so obsessed about "choices" would embrace AMD instead of the "monopoly" of intel. Hypocrisy, pure hypocrisy.
Can you say, "IBM"? (Score:1)
Once the king of the mainframe world, and replete with a bloated infrastructure and inbred complacency, no one ever thought this giant would have to wake up one day and actually face reality. Reality is that if there's someone smaller, better, and offers value, you'd best take them seriously. If anything, this simply reaffirmed that company size and customer base are no guarantee of continued success.
K6 now? K7 later? I'm planning on a K7 in 2000 (Score:1)
I'd say wait.
For me, it's disappointing to buy a new machine and then not be blown away.
Interesting how Intel doesn't seem to have anything in the works to answer the K7 challenge (other than advertising dollars). Check out the chip roadmap [fastgraphics.com] to see what I mean.
Money to burn (Score:1)
-t.
Top out at 500MhZ? (Score:1)
;) Woo
Jim
If I could get dual k6-3s.... (Score:1)
K6-3 caching (Score:1)
Hopefully the K6-3 cache will run at full core speed even with a 100 MHz FSB.
On chip 256k cache? (Score:1)
--
Your existing L2 cache will become L3 cache.
-Wee
What I would do. (Score:1)
BTW. You can now get Dual Alpha 21264 with 4 MB cache and 1 500 MHz processor for under 10K. Another processor is $3500 (about the same as a 450 Xeon with 2MB cache, but the Integer peformance is 75% higher and FP is 100% higher)
On chip 256k cache? (Score:1)
K2k (Score:1)
The names K...2K.
sorry.
K2k (Score:1)
turn out the lights... intel boy.. (Score:1)
How dare you compare a AMD to a Cyrix... Thats blasphemy... I hope those " pathetic little chips " keep bothering you.. because Intel is losing its monopoly while your polishing your Intel Inside...
What about core-voltages with .18 micron-chips (Score:1)
Do you have any information on that matter? I did not find any.
regards
tabit
go AMD -- 660 MHz! :-) (Score:1)
Otherwise, the K6-3 sounds just great for super-7 owners (and no, anandtech's comments that you don't need 100MHz fsb MB are kind of crap, because what older MBs will *properly* support 400+ MHz CPU speed?)
Btw, the current L2 cache you now have becomes L3, just like on alphas
Stop the madness! (Score:1)
SMP & C++ (Score:1)
Portland Group [pgroup.com] sells one. However, C++ (and C) usually result in much slower code than FORTRAN 77 or Fortran 90. Besides, Fortran 90 is much nicer to program - for numerical programs.
For this kind of task, I would strongly advice against buying AMD chips - their FPU is very slow compared to Intel's. You would be better off with a PII or Celeron. K7 might improve thinngs, but it isn't released yet.
Get a life (Score:1)
Yay. (Score:1)