Home

News

Forums

Hardware

CPUs

Mainboards

Video

Guides

CPU Prices

Memory Prices

Shop



Sharky Extreme :


Latest News


- The Razer Goliathus Offers a Premium Grade Soft Mat for Gamers
- VIA Launches the Lowest Power x86 Processor and World's Smallest Board
- OCZ Goes Mobile with a New Line of Do-It-Yourself Gaming Notebooks
- Arctic Cooling Offers 33% Lower GeForce 9800 Temperatures with the Accelero XTREME 9800
- Biostar Launches the TPower N750 (nForce 750a SLI) Motherboard
News Archives

Features

- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Microsoft's Dan Odell
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with ATI's Terry Makedon
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Seagate's Joni Clark
- Half-Life 2 Review
- DOOM 3 Review

Buyer's Guides

- March Extreme Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- January High-end Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- November Value Gaming PC Buyer's Guide

HARDWARE

  • CPUs

    - AMD Phenom X3 8750 Review
    - Intel Core 2 Duo E8500 Review
    - AMD Phenom X4 9850 Black Edition Review

  • Motherboards

    - AMD 780G Chipset Review

  • Video Cards

    - Gigabyte Radeon HD 3870 512MB Review
    - ASUS EN8800GT TOP 512MB Review
    - Gigabyte GeForce 8800 GT 512MB Review
    - PNY XLR8 GeForce 8800 GTS 512MB Review





  • Like its Coppermine siblings, the Pentium III 1.13GHz owes much of its performance to 256K of on-die “Advanced Transfer Cache.” Running at full processor speed and connected via a 256-bit wide data path, the cache keeps the P6 CPU core of the Pentium III well fed, even at the lofty clock of 1.13GHz. The full-speed L2 cache allows the Pentium III to scale well, without a major drop-off in performance per MHz as clock speed rises.

    This was not the case with the older version Pentium III design, which carried 512K of “Discrete” cache running at half the processor speed with less efficient transfer methods. If Intel kept with the old style cache, the 1.13GHz performance would be significantly lower than it is today.

    AMD has followed a similar path to the Pentium III Coppermine with their Athlon Thunderbird. The Athlon Thunderbird uses 256k of on-die full-speed L2 cache, which brings its performance level somewhat higher than the Pentium III at identical clocks. Of course, at this point, AMD's fastest is 1GHz, 133MHz behind the Pentium III 1.13GHz.

    You can read more details about the ATC system in our Intel Pentium III 500E and 550E FC-PGA CPU Review.





    Copyright © 2002 INT Media Group, Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. About INT Media Group | Press Releases | Privacy Policy | Career Opportunities