MMM
Results 1 to 25 of 48

Thread: Strange trend with GPU and CPU combo

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Banned
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Haslett, MI
    Posts
    2,221
    Quote Originally Posted by informal View Post
    Yeah more excuses. BTW your selective replying skills are now becoming better . Still haven't replied to the post I made the other day . To sum it up again,across a whole range of Windows apps,the difference on average between stock i7-870 and stock 965BE is 6%.Think about it .
    The "pot" calling the "kettle" black? Well, according to the link in that post I "selectively" replied to, a Q9550=i5 750=PH II 965! I'm sure you agree that the 1% that separates the first two from the third cpu is within the margin of error? I mean you're known to shave off as much as 3-4% in other cases. The fact is that you would go to lengths to muddy the numbers, even if it means shooting yourself in the foot. There is also one very simple fact, if you sum up all the tests in all reviews, the i5 750 is the all around better processor. This is not saying AMD's flagship processor is bad; it simply means it is bested by Intel's latest low end mainstream cpu. The i5 750 compared to the 965 BE you get:

    Same or better performance
    Lower price
    Lower power consumption
    A far more robust and feature-rich selection of motherboards

    What's not to like?

  2. #2
    Xtreme Cruncher
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    6,215
    Yeah and following your logic the i5 750 is be all end all of all the desktop models since it is only 7% off from the 870 with SMT and turbo and a few percents more off from the rest of the high end. The point is that the 965BE is not that far behind the whole Nehalem line,it loses by a hair in many tests and by a lot in select few which twists the overall performance rating towards the i5 and i7. Turbo boost,although very good future that AMD will also use, makes the 750 actually not the 2.66Ghz CPU as it never actually works at that clock.This is not bad since you get higher clock out of the box,but paints a wrong picture when someone says 2.66Ghz lynnfield is as fast as 955BE or 965BE.

    To sum it up,one more speed bin from AMD and they will cover the 3Ghz Bloomfield equivalent ,they really don't have to be more competitive than this .They will have IPC boosted(a la Deneb) 32nm shrink of 10h so that will tide them over quite nicely until bulldozer launches.

  3. #3
    Banned
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Haslett, MI
    Posts
    2,221
    Quote Originally Posted by informal View Post
    Yeah and following your logic the i5 750 is be all end all of all the desktop models since it is only 7% off from the 870 with SMT and turbo and a few percents more off from the rest of the high end. The point is that the 965BE is not that far behind the whole Nehalem line,it loses by a hair in many tests and by a lot in select few which twists the overall performance rating towards the i5 and i7. Turbo boost,although very good future that AMD will also use, makes the 750 actually not the 2.66Ghz CPU as it never actually works at that clock.This is not bad since you get higher clock out of the box,but paints a wrong picture when someone says 2.66Ghz lynnfield is as fast as 955BE or 965BE.

    To sum it up,one more speed bin from AMD and they will cover the 3Ghz Bloomfield equivalent ,they really don't have to be more competitive than this .They will have IPC boosted(a la Deneb) 32nm shrink of 10h so that will tide them over quite nicely until bulldozer launches.
    I really don't understand what "logic" you're talking about. The TRUTH is, depending on what particular app you're running, the difference (% in chips performance) actually varies greatly, eg. most apps capable of taking advantage of 8 threads. And please stop whining about the turbo, it's what you get with Intel's latest. You never hear anyone complaining about the fact that the 965 BE is running at 3.4Ghz at stock ALL THE TIME. Even assuming the best case scenario, the i5 750 is running at only 2.8Ghz with four threads, while the 965BE has a 600mhz advantage, but you won't hear me complaining because that's what you get - that's why one would buy the 965BE over a 940BE for example. Is the i5 750 bad because it packs technologies that allow it to perform better than advertized in certain scenarios?

    Don't talk about the future as if AMD's competitors will be sitting on their hands doing nothing. Besides, the NOW is what matters, not to mention Intel's 32nm chip production has taken off and 6-core chips are clocking past 6.3Ghz already (though you didn't hear that from me).

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •