AMD stages a fightback!

July 14th, 2006, was an important date for the two big processor companies. The processor giant Intel and the green counterpart AMD, duel turned to a new high as Intel released Core2Duo. AMD which had the market dominance for the past 3 years, at last lost it to Intel, and the rest is history.
Now after two Quarters, AMD is bringing a string of new releases, starting with the Quad FX range of processors released in November.

Quad FX
The strength that AMD had till last year was it's 90nm SOI technology which was much better than Intel's 90nm technology. But once Core2Duo was releases with a new 65nm technology, the strength turned into weakness in no time. The Quad FX range of processors, aka, FX70, FX72, FX74, clocked at 2.6Ghz, .8Ghz, 3.0Ghz is a great achievement as the engineers are concerned. To crunch millions of transistors and get a clock of 3.0Ghz at a 90nm SOI die, is no mean achievement. The whole idea was to get some vendor release a motherboard which dual socket which could host two Quad FX processors and provide some kind of direct memory connectivity, thanks to Hypertransport, and this could be branded as a Quad core. Intel had tried a similar trick by fusing two Core2Duo and calling it a quad core offing, Quadro.
Now the engineers might be amused but I am not sure if the enthusiasts and users were, as this bulky system sucked around 600Watts of power at peak load (mind that C2D sucks less than 100Watt). Also the benchmark did not show anything amazing, it lost even against the older FX 62, from the same school. But some argue that there in no Operating System at persent that could identify multiple cores and hence the benchmarks are not valid. But still no one could find a cork to fix the heating hole.
Now, thinking what AMD should do?? Goto 65nm fabrication?? Bingo!! that is what they exactly did...read on.
The Trimmed AMD
December 5, 2006, marked another important day for AMD, as they released their first 65nm SOI processor, the Brisbane -core, The Athlon 64 X2 processors are based on 65nm technology, with 4000+, 4800+ , 5000+ range of processors operating at around 2.1-2.6Ghz. These are only the entry level processors, but already some analysts claim they are more efficient than the Intel counterpart as it would consume only around one fourth power compared to Core2Duo. It has a TDP rating of 65watts(wow!!). The new processor works on socket AM2, and also has a reasonable pricing.
The entry level processors will be soon supplimented with, Lima, Kuma, Agena cores (stands for single, dual and quad core). The new processor has not yet been benchmarked though.
So wait and watch the drama as it unfolds...
codevalley

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

price is the only factor which turns me off...
hihi!!
u know what i am pointing at..
not just for the common indian!!