I'd also plug the advantages of having multiple cores. I think multi-core chips are a huge potential boon to some of the very deserving distributed computing efforts out there such as folding@home.
Which is better is going to vary by application. Applications that eat up all the memory bandwidth you can throw at it could perform better with the faster FSB. Those that are more CPU intensive would perform better with a faster CPU. There's quite a disparity on your two examples though. In the particular case you've cited, all things being equal, the faster CPU would be the better performer in the vast majority of cases.OK, still getting a handle on speed bottlenecks and what-not....so a question...
All other things being equal, what do you think would be faster:
2.2GHz clock with 2GHz FSB, or
3.0GHz clock with 800MHz FSB?
I'm getting the former, but again not sure where the "crossover" is on something like this.
OK, thx. Can you give a few common examples of each type of app above?Which is better is going to vary by application. Applications that eat up all the memory bandwidth you can throw at it could perform better with the faster FSB. Those that are more CPU intensive would perform better with a faster CPU. There's quite a disparity on your two examples though. In the particular case you've cited, all things being equal, the faster CPU would be the better performer in the vast majority of cases..
Then I'm either misunderstanding the ads somehow or Conroe needs to get with it. eg:I have to question your first example too, as there currently is no PC that ships with a 2GHz FSB. Even the chipsets used for Conroe are going to be 800MHz FSB, though reportedly you can overclock them to 1Ghz or even 1.2GHz FSB.
One example I can think of off-hand that is very memory bandwidth (FSB) dependent is Quake 3/Quake 4.Somehow I knew you'd be first to answer.![]()
OK, thx. Can you give a few common examples of each type of app above?
Ahhh. This is where all things are not equal.Then I'm either misunderstanding the ads somehow or Conroe needs to get with it. eg:
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage...CategoryId=pcmcat60700050018&id=1142288946533
Shows 1GHz bus.
Also:
http://www.ultramalta.com/products.jsp?id=32
Show a 2GHz bus, although maybe they're also talking about overclocking, or that's a top end the board supports but isn't there yet, or - ? Wouldn't think so, but again I'm so out of date on the whole PC specs thing......
:lost: Folding @ Home? What's that, some laundry kinda software? yeeshOne example I can think of off-hand that is very memory bandwidth (FSB) dependent is Quake 3/Quake 4.
An application that would be more processor intensive would be something like Folding @ Home.
k......the end result/meaning of that is...? ie it sounds like it's an "FSB wannabe" and so not nearly as good, generally?Ahhh. This is where all things are not equal.
AMD uses a Hypertransport bus which is the peripherals/ram communications interface to the processor. It's not truly a FSB bus since the memory controller is integrated into the processor itself.
It's a distributed computing project.:lost: Folding @ Home? What's that, some laundry kinda software? yeesh
If only it were that simple. It's more dependent on the specific application architecture so it can't be generalized. For example, in games, Quake is very memory bandwidth dependent whereas a game like Fear is more CPU cycle dependent.So basically games and more graphics-intensive kinda stuff would benefit from faster SBs, while I'm guessing more "number-crunching" things (spreadsheets or what-not) prefer the CPU boost, for instance?
Without going too deep and getting too boring - it's an improvement over the classic FSB design. Hypertransport is a bi-directional, point-to-point, serial communications protocol. Intel has also decoupled their FSB and peripheral communications bus (GTL+/AGTL+) for some time now, but iirc, it's still a parallel communications signaling interface.k......the end result/meaning of that is...? ie it sounds like it's an "FSB wannabe" and so not nearly as good, generally?
Thx. Have a good one? To be honest the one mentioned earlier I found muddled...Keep in mind that the FSB is only one of innumerable microarchitectural differences between processor designs.
For example, even though an integrated memory controller like that of Athlon64 is technically superior to anything resembling an FSB, Core has far better prefetching to achieve lower latency anyway. As this page shows: http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=2795&p=5
The point is this: Technobable is fun, but if you want to see how a processor performs, simply forget it and look at the benchmarks from a reputable site.
Getting back to EnglishThe end result of the above techno-babble is that decoupling these busses from the FSB allows for greater scalability in peripheral bus communications and greater flexibility in design. Eventually Intel will integrate their memory controller into the processor and the FSB will have gone the way of the dodo.
The top of the line Conroe is pricey. The E6300, the low end Conroe, can be had for as little as $200. Supposedly they are great overclockers too so even with the low-end Conroe you can wring performance out of it that comes fairly close to the FX-62.Well, today's the big day for Intel. The new conroe chips are out, and they are pricey! Newegg has 'em for $1,200. However, it appeared to me that OEM like Dell and Alienware had them for a bit less -- still over $900. AMD's FX-62 can be had for about $850. Hopefully, the prices will drop soon.
ZipZoomFly.com had the e6300 in stock last week but they sold out quickly. TigerDirect is listing their e6300 at $209, but it's on backorder. It appears that just about everybody is out of stock right now. Core 2 Duo's are a hot commodity.I'm still trying to find a place that sells the e6300. Can't find much at Newegg right now. However, at nearly 10 times the cost of the AMD 3800 chip, I'll stay with AMD. After further consideration, one of the benchmark sites I saw didn't impress me as much as before. They were comparing Intel's new top of the line to AMD's bottom of the line (same classification of chip). Hopefully AMD will release something bigger and better soon, at least with lower power consumption.