And I just wanted to make some sense out of all this alphabet soup. Pentium D, Intel EM64T, Athlon 64, Opteron, Sempron, Itanium, Turion, it doesn't make any damn sense to me anymore.Is this a valid/apt analogy, or am I way off:EM64T : Athlon64 :: Itanium : OpteronWhat exactly are the Sempron and Turion? If a Pentium D is dual core, then what's the AMD equivalent, if there is one?I realize I'm asking for a concise response to the state of intel-compatible processors in general, and that may be difficult. But any help is appreciated. I was just horribly confused the last time I looked on Newegg (my main PC is an Athlon 1500+, if that gives you an idea of the last time I upgraded...)[Edited on December 3, 2005 at 1:36 AM. Reason : f]
12/3/2005 1:36:15 AM
don't feel bad cause i lost touch since i left NCSU... i'm still running a fuckin amd 450 baby!
12/3/2005 4:41:09 PM
Toms Hardware did a massive comparo and it has been updated as recently as Oct I think.
12/3/2005 4:46:29 PM
The Athlon 64 x2 is AMD's cometition for the Pentium D's. Of course... calling it a competition is a joke. Cnet just recently did a prize fight benchmark between those two chips...http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-10442_7-6389077-1.htmlBottom line?
12/3/2005 5:20:17 PM
lmfaocnetin the CNet test they didn't use an intel chipset mbthey also didn't say whether or not they turned HT off with the D/EEand the multitasking test consisted of only two processes[Edited on December 3, 2005 at 5:33 PM. Reason : explanation]
12/3/2005 5:28:32 PM
http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/processorsmemory/0,39024015,39233885,00.htmSimilar conclusions.Was trying to link him to a comparison that was at least accessible by someone who didn't know what they were looking at beforehand.Now, it's true that the P4 EE and P4 D's don't do as badly in synthetic benchmarks, and the cnet comparison seems exaggerated. AMD still has the most robust dual core lineup, for servers and home users both in general. That's not to say there isn't some point where a p4 has a better price/performance ratio than something that AMD offers, but for the most part AMD is the better deal and the better performer.For more thurough comparison...http://www.tomshardware.com/cpu/20051121/the_mother_of_all_cpu_charts-38.htmlThat's where the benchmarks start. Note that for the most part the Athlon64's find their way to the top of the charts. More often then not, Pentium D's are outperformed by AMD chips priced well below them. There are a few real exceptions to this, and if those real exceptions correlate to how you use your computer, then take that into consideration. Some of the synthetic benchmarks also seem to produce some inconsistent results, but synthetic benchmarks are nearly as good a guage as looking at how programs you'd actually use run.The mother-of-all charts is a bit much to look at, espescially if you focus on the synthetic benchmarks too much or the gaming benchmarks and aren't a game. [Edited on December 3, 2005 at 6:06 PM. Reason : ]
12/3/2005 5:49:19 PM
cnet also used nvidia instead of ati, another swayer in the "competition", at least in the gfx department, but there's no doubt amd is still the better chip[Edited on December 3, 2005 at 6:08 PM. Reason : .]
12/3/2005 6:07:49 PM
Generally speaking, my experience has been, when looking for the most bang for your buck:Athlon X2 > Pentium DAthlon 64 > Pentium 4Pentium M > Turion 64Celeron ~= SempronI dunno about the Opteron and Xeon, since I don't work with servers much. I hear the Opteron is better, but can't versify it personally. Just my two cent(s).
12/3/2005 8:21:29 PM