The Fastest Processor You Can't Run 236
auld_wyrm writes "Intel is trying to push the news of AMD's Barcelona launch out of the headlines with the release of the Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9770, a 3.20 GHz CPU that runs on a 1600 MHz front-side bus. It is the fastest consumer level processor that has come out, but don't plan on running it anytime soon. The ~$1200 price tag, and the lack of any motherboards that support a 1600MHz FSB will stop this unneeded answer to Barcelona from appearing in enthusiast's PCs for Christmas. Still, the benchmarks from this powerful CPU are something awesome to behold."
Just the things for Windows 7 (Score:4, Funny)
Still Waiting (Score:2)
Anyone know anything about this?
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More likely its just FUD to try and scare people away from the competition. From what I've read, the SSE4.1 isn't terribly useful either. Neither
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There is no particular guarantee that AMD will survive long enough actually to produce any processors using this planned SSE
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Why must you people exaggerate! (Score:5, Funny)
You know bloody well it'll take 24 GB of memory to actually run an office app!
It'll also demand a 4GB videocard with a GPU strong enough to process all SETI requests ever in about 20 minutes
Re:Why must you people exaggerate! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Just the things for Windows 7 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just the things for Windows 7 (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm actually grateful for that. (Score:2)
It means:
If Windows 7 does require 24 gigs of RAM and a 1 TB solid-state drive, I'll be loving my 12 gigs of RAM and 10 gigs of hard disks in a RAID for half the price. (Or something similar.)
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It doesn't spend a core running antivirus or even half a core running DRM.
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It's not as bad as all the
Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
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They would probably be so high I would not be able to comprehend it, or translate it into what sort of improvement the new processor would have over my current 700 bogomips setup.
Would probably be overkill, since Firefox stalls anyway on some web pages with all sorts of extra advertisements, etc. that have to be fetched. Want to see, however, since a big, fast processor might just be what's needed to suck the required content out of all of the various se
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Coincidentally, I was wondering if it was fast enough to finish the infinite loops that Firefox kicks off in/with/involving X.
(Yeah, yeah, I know it's *really* the Firefox add-ons or the naughty websites I go to... porn sites aren't a fair test of stability because they're shameful, and Firefox is a delicate flower that wilts in the presence of immorality, or poorly-written plugins. I'm just drunkly bashing my favorite browser. I abuse her because t
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Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Intel had them overclock an existing Core 2 Quad Extreme to perform the "benchmarks".
Check out the article on Toms Hardware Guide:
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/Intel-QX9770-X48-X38-QX9650,review-29749.html [tomshardware.co.uk]
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
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Simple, you test it on a motherboard that supports it. "But wait," you say, "the article said no motherboard does." Yeah, they often get it wrong, welcome to slashdot. While Intel does not have a chipset that officially supports 1600MHz, there are X35 boards out there from manufacturers such as Asus and Gigabyte that have bumped the FSB frequency anyway. Somehow, even under load, the platform is stable.
benchmarks (Score:4, Insightful)
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Reminds me of stuff (Score:5, Insightful)
Reminds me of all that stuff I read for years in Pop Science and Pop Mechanics -- ultra cool stuff you'll never lay your hands on. Well, this will be available, but probably not for 6 months. Meanwhile, I'm not about to upgrade my mobo for it anyway. I work in Photoshop on an Athlon 64, the cheapest one available about a year ago, and it's still no issue of speed, memory is the problem, having enough of it. Need mobos which can hold 16 GB of memory, not faster CPUs.
Re:Reminds me of stuff (Score:5, Informative)
Then go buy one. NewEgg's motherboard search has 'max supported memory' as an option where there are 2 that support 16GB and 3 that support 32GB. And that's in the consumer grade motherboards. You've been able to get that kind of memory support in a server class motherboard, that really doesn't cost much more than a consumer one, for years and years now.
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So get a motherboard with 8 slots [dabs.com] then.
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Yes, there is, it's 3GB on Windows (2, unless you know how to make the config changes to enable 3).
That's not to say photoshop wouldn't benefit from more than 3GB of RAM; it uses a tile cache on disk which would be sped up if it were in disk cache.
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On 32-bit systems, yes. XP 64-bit edition supports 128GB [microsoft.com].
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Must be some boards (Score:3, Informative)
Works on intel X38 chipsets. (Score:5, Informative)
"...The Intel X48 chipset is a refresh of the X38 chipset aimed at the high end desktop market. It will be the first chipset to support 1600 MHz FSB parts (though current boards do as well in some cases) and will have unlocked bus ratios for improved overclocking ability. So there really isn't much change from the X38 chipset -- and in fact most X38 motherboards aimed at the enthusiast will probably support 1600 MHz FSB processors anyway. For my testing I used the Asus P5E3 Deluxe motherboard based on the X38 chipset to run the QX9770 and it ran without an issue.... http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=484 [pcper.com]
Sounds like many existing Intel X38 chipset mainboards will work with the QX9770, and I'd bet Intel's DX38BT can run it, (but probably at FSB 1,333MHz) http://www.intel.com/products/motherboard/DX38BT/index.htm [intel.com]
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Nothing dramatic, but surely the topic poster is incorrectly claiming that Intel is hyping a chip that can't be expected to work in the market.
tag: epeen (Score:2)
Is it me (Score:2)
Nerds know better and your typical "user" doesn't care. Make a quality chip and spending a shit ton on marketing buzzwords is unnecessary. Nerds will buy it and sell it on word of mouth. Done. Fire your marketing people.
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Is anybody using Barcelona yet? (Score:5, Interesting)
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What does 3GHz give me (Score:2)
Obviously you don't multi-task (Score:2)
Correct. (Score:2)
I have a laptop with apparently a
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And your computer is never doing anything in the background? No antivirus software? No explorer.exe? You never plug in a memory stick to save work to while your word processor is open?
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What does an extra 2 GHz give me?
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Re:What does 3GHz give me (Score:5, Insightful)
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What was that?! (Score:2, Funny)
Is this different from an enthusiast overclock? (Score:2)
Can someone please explain how this is "better"? How big of an impact will the faster FSB have?
Will it allow you to run memory at insane speeds, and is there even RAM available that can handle those speeds?
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Let's put it this way. If Freescale had shipped a G4 with a decent FSB a year earlier, Apple wouldn't have had an excuse to switch to Intel. Access to RAM is the real bottleneck these days.
Unavailable? (Score:3, Interesting)
So basically (Score:2)
Incorrect, motherboards are available (Score:3, Informative)
I think it's very descriptive (Score:2)
the bus is nice (Score:2)
The core 2 duos are already pretty nice in terms of raw cpu speed, it is the rest of the system that could use a speedup.
You're all missing the point... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Almost as soon as we had Phenom samples, Intel made the decision to sample a CPU requiring a FSB that wasn't officially supported by any chipset at the time. No, 1600MHz FSB support won't come until next year with the X48 chipset, but it didn't matter to Intel; we were getting chips now.
Take a moment to understand the gravity of what I just said; Intel, the company that would hardly acknowledge overclocking, was now sampling a CPU that required overclocking to run at stock speeds. Even more telling is that Intel got the approval of upper management to sample these unreleased processors, requiring an unreleased chipset, in a matter of weeks. This is Intel we're talking about here, the larger of the two companies, the Titanic, performing maneuvers with the urgency of a speed boat.
It's scary enough for AMD that Intel has the faster processor, but these days Intel is also the more agile company."
http://anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3153&p=2 [anandtech.com]
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Except everyone seems to have missed the fact that the X38 chipset, available now [dabs.com], supports 1600MHz FSB.
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Jane and Joe user (Score:3, Interesting)
Besides, just how much unwarranted computing performance does Jane and Joe user really need to surf the net, do e-mail, instant message, play music and do home office chores.
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The biggest reason this chip left the lab is to be a flashy status symbol for rich gamers and to manipulate brand perceptions.
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Did you actually, you know, read the article? The entire point here is that Intel have just released a chip that needs a faster bus to run. And, yeah, sure, a 576-bit wide memory interface is great, but it would be insanely expensive for a consumer-oriented system. I'd expect to see the first 256-bit wide consumer systems (requiring 4 DIMMs to be installed for peak p
Consumer level (Score:2)
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You mean these..
http://www.hpcwire.com/hpc/1886368.html [hpcwire.com]
More Benchmark Detail Here, Not Just Synthetics (Score:3, Interesting)
"Cinebench is perhaps our most favorite "quick and dirty" test for gauging how fast a new CPU core is. If you're looking for a general quick-take view of system performance and CPU power, Cinebench consistently gives results that we rely on here in our labs. In the multi-threaded version of our this test, the QX9770 is 63% faster than the Phenom 9700. And with only a 33% clock speed advantage over the new Phenom, obviously the new Intel core is significantly more efficient clock-for-clock with a higher IPC (instructions per clock cycle) throughput."
"The fastest single processor for gaming from the AMD side of the house, generally speaking according to these two tests, is the Athlon 64 X2 6400+. Again, that's according to the game engines at work in Crysis and F.E.A.R. The fastest processor of Intel's offering is obviously the QX9770, which looks to be 6 - 8% faster than its 3GHz counterpart, the QX9650. In general though, the AMD systems are easily outperformed by the Intel-based setups, in some cases by a large margin."
wow (Score:2, Funny)
Does that mean it can run Vista?
Gives new meaning to quad whore... (Score:2)
Count coup (Score:2)
Now if Intel bumps up the performance on their value line, AMD is toast and Intel engineers can go back to resting on their laurels until another challenger steps up.
Nothing for me here. If the system draws more than 60 watts, do not want.
6 Ghz? (Score:2)
3.2Ghz looks too 2002-ish.
Turn off tags before I claw my eyes out (Score:2)
Re:tag this post as (Score:5, Funny)
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30. A little trust goes a long way. The less you use, the further you'll go
Re:What everybody wants to know (Score:5, Funny)
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What would you say if I told you that AMD processors were made in Germany?
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However, that does not make AMD a German company and that being said, Intel* is firmly based in the USA. I live a few minutes from Intel's testing & research fab in Oregon, and the Corporate Headquarters is in California (not too far from the AMD headquarters)
*they own the personal computer CPU world, AMD is a much smaller competitor.
That is what he might say.
Welcome to 18th Century Economics (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Welcome to 18th Century Economics (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, in purely economical terms, you would be better off specializing in the goods and services that best suit you. However, there are other concerns besides economic ones. For example, lets say that the US outsources all of its electronics manufacturing to China. Then, if China wished to exert influence on US foreign policy, all they'd have to do is threaten to cut off the supply of new electronic parts. The US would have to consider China's opinion, or face large economic losses from a supply shortfall. Therefore, its in America's interest to keep at least some of its electronics manufacturing capacity, even when doing so is not economically optimal.
That's one of the flaws I often see in economists - the tendency to reduce everything to profit/loss equations, and disregard the fundamental fact that people are not the perfectly rational producer/consumer units in economics simulations.
I am greatful for capitalism (Score:2)
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Well, let's just say, in Soviet Russia, CPU processes you!
Re:Good news for Windows Vista and the USA (Score:4, Insightful)
I fixed your Haiku (Score:2)
memory control on die...
That is what we want!
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-nB
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I hope not. My hard wood floors hate it enough when I play, let alone if it was a part of the motherboard. I hate to think how long my nice new computer would last that way.
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You missed the tech specs regarding the 45 nm process and high K gates. They run at these speeds without overclocking and on about 20% less power..
That's hardly a formula for a meltdown.