Last edited by terrace215; 08-06-2010 at 09:37 AM.
does anyone know how well BD will clock on normal desktop voltages?
Actually, I can't get into specifics, but I would be willing to bet that my processor actually performs better at half load than anyone here would ever expect.
It will be very interesting to see a 16-thread SB with 8 active threads vs. a 16-thread interlagos with 8 active threads.
Let me get this straight: you haven't seen gaming results for SB,let alone for BD desktop part(or any aspect of BD performance for that matter);you claim that in integer work, with 50% utilization ,BD will be "particularly bad" without providing any source or at least a reason for this line of thinking. All this makes me think that you just failed big time.
First of all,we haven't seen gaming results for SB.It may be great at gaming for all we know.It may be the same as i7 we have today or slightly better.We have few results where Turbo is not working well which show performance uplift up to 10% compared to Lynnfield and a geek bench result from a mobile SB with obviously working Turbo mode which shows ~20% uplift(which is very good).No gaming results yet.
Second of all,we haven't seen any performance results of any Bulldozer variation.Bulldozer will have noticeably improved integer units relative to Stars cores,which will be 4 issue and each core will be capable of 2 loads and 1 store(matching SB core).It will have more advanced Turbo mode too,meaning very aggressive up clocking when CPU is underutilized (the scenario you previously described as "particularly bad"). It will have much more potent fpu unit than Stars cores that can be split in two and will support AVX. It will have more L3 cache and it will have a new shared L2 level cache and probably a trace cache. There is also a hint of a so called "accelerate mode" in which BD's front end can dispatch 2x more instructions to the module's 2 cores under certain circumstances(dresdenboy's blog).There will probably be a lot more prefetching and speculative execution going on in the design too.Now we don't know how much of an improvement all this will bring to gaming(which is mainly a GPU thing) but I think it will bring very noticeable gains in traditional and parallel workloads.
Now it may be the case that when underutilized one BD MPU will trail one SB MPU but to claim this to be the case now ,you would have to have both chips in your hands today and running actual tests on them.Which I'm sure you are not.
Last edited by informal; 08-06-2010 at 10:05 AM.
Fast computers breed slow, lazy programmers
The price of reliability is the pursuit of the utmost simplicity. It is a price which the very rich find most hard to pay.
http://www.lighterra.com/papers/modernmicroprocessors/
Modern Ram, makes an old overclocker miss BH-5 and the fun it was
I thought it was fairly obvious. Up to 50% activity, you have a full SB core with no HT load against 1/2 the module. Add in that Intel turbo >= AMD turbo (probably >> IMO), and there you go. For FP, at least in 256-wide work the module had to share to begin with, so the relative performance increase of half a module is greater when you stop loading the other half.
There was a thread back in the day on amdzone, where people started asking about single-threaded performance. JF's answer was first that it doesn't matter to server customers, and then, when pressed, well, it will be better than current k10.5 single threaded performance. Reading between the lines, it won't be great. Clearly not in SB's league. But what many people miss is that single-threaded performance directly relates to 50% loaded performance (more so integer), too, due to BD's module design, and SB's HT design.
So there, you have 2 indicators.
Like I said, a point of relative weakness. It's relative strength will be stuff that can truly continuously use all the cores.
Last edited by terrace215; 08-06-2010 at 10:26 AM.
Are you kidding? Maybe better than *I* would expect, but certainly worse than the biggest fans here are expecting.
Oh, come now. The marketing gentleman doth protest too much.Fooling someone will allow me to sell a processor. Telling the truth is what helps you sell millions of processors.
There is way too much on the line for me to be "fooling" people.
Sure, sure, if you told outright lies, that would poison the market, though you might be able to fool millions before too much feedback was out there.
But lets not pretend that your goal is to present the unvarnished, objective truth of the tradeoffs between your product and the competition. Your employer would (rightfully) not be be pleased.
So it's a gray area called "marketing". That's fine. You're an advocate for your products. You seek to emphasize their strengths, and minimize their shortcomings.
Last edited by terrace215; 08-06-2010 at 10:15 AM.
So you skip everything else I have written (because you know I have a point) and make a claim ,again,without knowing few important things like : a) intel's Turbo being much more aggressive than AMD's version ? b)a performance of "half the module" (you do realize that "half the module" is actulay a full fledged 4 issue improved integer core with an access to 256 FMAC unit,shared L2 cache+shared L3 cache and a new and improved Turbo Core ability?).
The perf. "penalty" of fully loading up a module is ~10% so single active core will be actually performing better even without the Turbo,let alone with it.
ing typical
cant open 1 amd thread without same trolls talking same nonsense
Last edited by crazydiamond; 08-06-2010 at 10:34 AM.
LEO!!!! amd phenom II x6 1100T | gigabyte 990fxa-ud3 . . 2x2gb g.skill 2133c8 | 128gb g.skill falcon ssd sapphire ati 5850 | x-fi xtrememusic. . . samsung f4 2tb | samsung dvdrw . . corsair tx850w | windows 7 64-bit. ddc3.25 xspc restop | ek ltx | mc-tdx | BIP . . lycosa-g9-z2300 | 26" 1920x1200 lcd .
I totaly agree, K10 was a bit overhype ... And i understand the way to send conservative numbers.
That's awesomeAlso, don't forget that we have a boost technology. The 50% number is based on a fully utilized processor. If you were only running a single thread you would be looking at a very different uplift.
I hope AMD is gonna deliver some new FX chips. So long we havn't seen them.
When BD's advocate downplays the importance of its single-threaded performance, I take the hint.
So either you disagree with this point, or you don't see that relative single-threaded performance is a nearly perfect indicator of relative 50%-of-fully-threaded performance. It is only past 50% that the big design differences (modules vs HT) start to kick in. And until 50% we don't really need to worry that power or memory bandwidth is going to be all that constraining, and besides, they're on fairly even ground with those factors.
I'll assume you do understand the latter, so I guess you are arguing that BD is going to be very close to SB in single-threaded performance.
I don't buy it.
Last edited by terrace215; 08-06-2010 at 11:55 AM.
there is Xtrem funny people here ^^
we need to have a paypal setup gambling section of the forum. let the fanboys take some real risk with what they say. (this applies to all variations of fanboys)
A good product sells itself, a bad one doesn't. Marketing is there to help the good products to sell even more and to help the bad ones to sell something. Marketing teams almost always tell the truth. The problem is not what they tell you, it's what they don't tell you. You, with emphasys in you, are fooling your potential customers just as much as any other marketing guy.
I'll say this one time only: let's have a clear and sincere conversation. Sincere doesn't mean sharing results. Don't try to fool me because it's not going to work. Don't take this as an offense, again I'm sure you know what I'm refering to, so please.
I'll take that bet. I can guarantee you right now that your processor won't be able to match my expectations.
And yes, it'll be very interesting. I'm looking forward to it.
Friends shouldn't let friends use Windows 7 until Microsoft fixes Windows Explorer (link)
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