rockthegod
Dark Overlord !!!
Just recently, Anandtech managed to get its hands on an engineering sample of the Nehalem chip [based on a completely new micro-architecture @ 45 nm/4 Cores/8 Threads and slated to release in Q4 2008] from Intel and do some thorough benchmarking tests. The tests revealed the chip to be 20-50% faster when compared on a clock-to-clock performance with Intel's latest generation of 45 nm quad-core chips.
Due to some PCI-E performance/instability issues, gaming benchmark couldn't be done now.. but I am more than eager to find out how this thing handles Crysis when paired with the new supposed-to-be king in the graphics arena: HD 4870...
The performance exhibited by this baby is simply terrific when you take into account that these are the early builds of the chip and Intel intentionally locked the chip to a mere 2.66 GHz clock speed. As stated by Anandtech, what AMD was doing to Intel during the P4 Prescott dayz, Intel is doing the same thing to itself. Amazing what a little competition results in.... AMD must get their a$$es back on track to make this thing down....
READ THE AWESOME ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE... A MUST READ
Final Words Quote from the Article:
Due to some PCI-E performance/instability issues, gaming benchmark couldn't be done now.. but I am more than eager to find out how this thing handles Crysis when paired with the new supposed-to-be king in the graphics arena: HD 4870...
The performance exhibited by this baby is simply terrific when you take into account that these are the early builds of the chip and Intel intentionally locked the chip to a mere 2.66 GHz clock speed. As stated by Anandtech, what AMD was doing to Intel during the P4 Prescott dayz, Intel is doing the same thing to itself. Amazing what a little competition results in.... AMD must get their a$$es back on track to make this thing down....
READ THE AWESOME ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE... A MUST READ
Final Words Quote from the Article:
First keep in mind that these performance numbers are early, and they were run on a partly crippled, very early platform. With that preface, the fact that Nehalem is still able to post these 20 - 50% performance gains says only one thing about Intel's tick-tock cadence: they did it.
We've been told to expect a 20 - 30% overall advantage over Penryn and it looks like Intel is on track to delivering just that in Q4. At 2.66GHz, Nehalem is already faster than the fastest 3.2GHz Penryns on the market today. At 3.2GHz, I'd feel comfortable calling it baby Skulltrail in all but the most heavily threaded benchmarks. This thing is fast and this is on a very early platform, keep in mind that Nehalem doesn't launch until Q4 of this year.
Over six years ago I had dinner with Intel's Pat Gelsinger (back when he was Intel's CTO), and I asked him the same question I always do: "what are you excited about?" Back then his response was "threading", Intel was about to launch Hyper Threading and Pat was convinced that it was absolutely necessary for the future of microprocessors.
It was at the same dinner that Pat mentioned Intel may do a chip with an integrated memory controller much like AMD, but that an IMC wouldn't solve the problem of idle execution units - only indirectly mitigate it. With Nehalem, Intel managed to combine both - and it only took 6 years to pull it off.
Pat also brought up another very good point at that dinner. He turned to me and said that you can only integrate a memory controller once, what do you do next to improve performance? Intel has managed to keep increasing performance, but what I really want to see is what happens at the next tock. Intel proved its ability with Conroe and with Nehalem it shows that the tick-tock model can work, but more than anything looking at Nehalem today makes me excited at what Sandy Bridge will bring.
The fact that we're able to see these sorts of performance improvements despite being faced with a dormant AMD says a lot. In many ways Intel is doing more to improve performance today than when AMD was on top during the Pentium 4 days.
AMD never really caught up to the performance of Conroe, through some aggressive pricing we got competition in the low end but it could never touch the upper echelon of Core 2 performance. With Penryn, Intel widened the gap. And now with Nehalem it's going to be even tougher to envision a competitive high-end AMD CPU at the end of this year. 2009 should hold a new architecture for AMD, which is the only thing that could possibly come close to achieving competition here. It's months before Nehalem's launch and there's already no equal in sight, it will take far more than Phenom to make this thing sweat.