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Highs" and "Lows" of Modern Multi-Core - tech|
| (hx) 10:23 PM CET - Nov,03 2005 |
The chaps over at
Digit-Life have tested performance of the fastest and the slowest dual-core
x86-processors from the two leading manufacturers: Intel Pentium eXtreme
Edition 840, Intel Pentium D 820, AMD Athlon 64 X2 4800+ and AMD Athlon 64 X2
3800+:
It's no secret anymore that the situation with performance of dual-core CPUs from Intel is not very bright, but we were surprised to see it that bad. In fact, Pentium D / Pentium XE processors are highly specialized solutions according to our test results, good only for a relatively small group of tasks. AMD rules everywhere else. Another fly in the Intel's ointment is that Athlon 64 X2 3800+ looks very well as a processor for classic single-threaded tasks, while the 2.8-GHz Pentium D 820 core can pretend only to the "low middle" for these days.
In fact, Athlon 64 X2 3800+ is quite a joy. We found no application, where it's outperformed by the A64 X2 4800+ more than its clock lag. It means that the halved L2 Cache does not have a fatal effect on performance (as pessimists could have expected). There is just one "but": the price. Intel's pricing policy concerning low-end dual-cores is very aggressive. Pentium D 820 costs about $240 in Moscow retail (at the time this article was written), while the Athlon 64 X2 3800+ - $380. This difference may drive some users away from AMD, who must have a system with a dual-core CPU - even despite the excellent performance of processors from this company.
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