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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





  • Price: $350 in volumes of 1,000

    The megahertz battle is over, but the performance war is as fervent as ever. Intel's Pentium 4, with its deep 20-stage pipeline and impending move to a 130nm manufacturing process, has clenched the ability to beat AMD's Athlon to every speed grade in the foreseeable future. That's right, the ferocious race between Intel and AMD to the gigahertz mark will not manifest itself again any time soon. However, the ability to scale the Pentium 4 to before-unseen clock speeds carries with it an inherent disadvantage. Mainly, the average number of instructions successfully executed per clock cycle (referred to as IPC) has decreased. Therein lies AMD's window of opportunity. While their Athlon is not as scalable in terms of frequency, its IPC is greater.

    So, even though Intel has sat merrily at 1.5GHz for the past four months and AMD has taken a breather at 1.2GHz for the past five, the performance delta between the competing processor lines has been very small. Generally, Intel has been dominating floating-point intensive applications, while AMD has taken most of the victories in integer-based programs.

    AMD is again upping the ante in this vicious processor war with two new high-performance products: the Athlon 1.33GHz, designed to operate on the 133MHz DDR EV6 bus, and the Athlon 1.3GHz, which runs on the 100MHz DDR bus.





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