I have not seen anything about k8l having a 4 channel memory controller, or 2 dual channel ones. From my understanding k8l will plug into s1207 boards that are wired for dual channel, and whilst it would be possible for channels to be disabled for this purpose, it doesn't suggest there would be 4 channels, thus I'd put forward that there is a dual channel memory controller until proven otherwise.
Secondly where are these IPC numbers coming from? We don't know how much faster k8l will be clock for clock.
It seems almost definate that k8l will be a 4 issue design, so theres up to 33% improvement from that alone. I'm willing to bet there going to be some other small changes as well, but improving IPC is not something that you can do easily, and its not a task that scales linearly with the number of transistors your able to throw at the task. Taking into consideration your suggestion of20% higher IPC than kentsfield (which is optimistic):
3000 x 1.2 = 3600
If k8l was 20% faster clock for clock, it would take a 3.6ghz kentsfield to match a 3ghz k8l. AMD are aiming at 2.7-2.9ghz and traditionally amd don't leave much headroom on their high end parts.
You could buy a kentsfield today, overclock it and get k8l level performance. A year from now intels offering will have larger cache and faster fsb to keep the core fed, have a new chipset with a ddr3 memory controller, and possiby higher IPC with things like sse4 added to potentially speed thing up further.
I think the two will be very close on IPC, not a 20% difference at least, and intel will be clocked at least 20% higher stock, and have more headroom for overclocking.
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