Intel Pentium D & Pentium 4 670 - tech
(hx) 04:27 PM CEST - May,26 2005
- Post a comment  | The Pentium D 820 /left/ and Pentium 4 670 /right/ |
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Today, Intel is launching
a couple new processors, the Pentium D 820 and the Pentium 4 670. The P4 670
is the fastest single Pentium 4 processor ever released, running at nearly 4GHz.
The Pentium D 820, meanwhile, runs a full gigahertz slower, but it has two
complete Pentium 4-style CPU cores onboard for a very nice price. Which is
better? Well, that depends on a great many things:
TechReport: Still, Pentium D 820's performance does present some rather bold
contrasts. It's the slowest CPU in the pack whenever we throw a single-threaded
test at it. The 820's gaming performance especially raises some red flags for
us, as we've noted. Eventually, games will most likely make the conversion to
multithreading, but in the interim, I worry that the newest, most intensive game
engines may not run terribly well on a Pentium D at 2.8GHz. Many games will work
just fine, no doubt, but those that use lots of AI or physics may be a strain.
Hard-core gamers will want to stay away, as will others who extensively use one
single-threaded application at a time. The Athlon 64 3500+ is the better choice
for them.
AnandTech: So what is the final verdict? There are cases where the 670
performs better than the 570 and cases where it performs worse. It all comes
back to the differences between the two processors. Running with the Pentium 4
670, some applications benefit from having more cache, and other suffer due to
the higher latency. To recap, applications that stream data (encoding and
rendering) aren't impacted by the cache differences between the 5xx and 6xx
series. The two processors perform nearly identically in the tests we ran in
these areas. Games have generally seen a boost from the added cache (we've seen
this since the first Extreme Edition), so the 670 has a slight edge over the 570
in that category. Under office and workstation applications, the impact varies
from case to case.
Bjord3D:
More benchmarks are in order to really see how well these new processors
perform, but from the tests I ran, I was surprised by the Pentium D 820. I
thought that it would fall behind in many of the benchmarks because of its lower
frequency, but it held pretty solid ground and put up some impressive numbers
more than a couple times. It was especially interesting for me to see just how
much better the Pentium D 820 performed than the Pentium 4 670 in the ABBYY
FineReader 7.0 tests. To some, 15-20 seconds might not seem like a lot, but if
you used applications like that day-in and day-out, then I'm sure you could
really appreciate the increase in productivity and efficiency offered by the
dual-core processors. Thankfully, the 820 comes in at an affordable price level.
TrustedReviews: The Pentium 4 670 is just more of the same and is expensive
to boot. The Pentium D however, is a decent introduction to dual-core from
Intel, and for most consumers it will be the better choice by far. It's clear
that AMD's X2 is a far better performer, but it also costs a lot more.
Ultimately, with Intel's projected pricing, we could see entry level dual core
PCs sooner rather than later.
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