Some good news for overclockers in here:
The big achievement is how they manage to get six cores running at
3.2 GHz at the same TDP as a quad core 3.2 GHz Phenom II X4 955.
The 140W 965 is only just now going EOL being entirely replaced by
a 125W version.
It's almost comparable with a full process node improvement like Intel
did by going from a 130W quad core 3.33 GHz 45nm Nehalem to the
130W six core 3.33 GHz 32nm Westmere.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...i-x6,2604.html
http://www.techreport.com/discussions.x/18731
http://anandtech.com/show/3641/amd-d...o-core-enabled
http://hothardware.com/News/AMD-Turb...logy-Revealed/
The first two sides mention low-k and THG specifically mentions it as
going between the metal lines so most likely the speed improvements
are indeed due to to lower RC-wire delays.
This looks to be very good news for overclockers since the RC delays
are basically temperature independent. You can't improve them by cooling,
so LN and LHe results are for a large part determined by RC delays.
Regards, Hans.