The IPC is one thing, congestion in some ”sub system” is another. I truly believe that AMD have taken the opportunity to optimize cache and memory handling.
Better IPC can give a boost in certain areas (computational intensive), while yielding less in other (heavy data shuffling). I believe AMD have addressed both problem in Deneb.
In other words, even
if IPC gets the 15-20% boost (which for certain IS possible), if the rest of the “chain” are unable to handle these are numbers we will only see in synthetic benchmarks *coughIntelcough* and not in our everyday computer experience…
I would like to know if also the AM2+ Deneb are going to have higher NB/HT frequencies, or if this is only for the HT3.1 ready motherboards?

In theory the HT2 allows for up to 2600 MHz. I can feel, on my computer, how much better everything flows with NB/HT at 2440 MHz compared to 1800/2000 MHz, so I am certain that this will be an important point!
So, my uneducated guess, supported by some (dubious) benchmarks shown on internet is this:
1. Bigger cache
2. Optimized cache handling
3. (hopefully) Some SSE and possibly INT optimizations
4. Faster NB/HT frequencies
5. All this at lower power draw…
With most of these whishes fulfilled, there should be no problem reaching a clock for clock boost of 12-15% on an average. Weighing in substantial headroom for higher clocks, AMD have in my book a
CPU that is equally fast, or faster 
, than Intels offering for
real life computer experience. Maybe not for all synthetic SSE4 optimized benchmarks, but that is another story…
And
Chad Boga, I understand your standpoint and you bring up some valid questions. However when a discussion morphs into a “meta discussion” (a discussion about the discussion…) everyone have to try to let that stop after the first round because all that is left after that is name calling

(which leads to nothing good…)
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