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AMD Bulldozer Finally!

I'm not calling it a mistake.

If the benchies above are true then BD is a mistake IMO. Phenom II seems to be faster per clock bar heavily threaded workloads (I.E. not desktop). Would a die shrink Phenom X4/X6 with a much higher stock frequency and maybe a more aggressive turbo be better all round?

Only a few days to find out though. I hold a little hope that these are all wrong and BD will be a monster of a chip. Only a little hope, mind
 
Why not Intel?
2500K is a mighty fine CPU.

If for gaming and no need for heavily threaded apps. Then yeh, the 2500k is an awesome chip, complete with an IGP.

The more cores the better for me. 6 or 8 is better then 4 for me, even if they are individually slower

If you do lots of work that involve many threads, then depending on price, the bulldozer could be your choice.

My question is, how would a 2500k/2600k perform video encoding with Lucid Virtu using the IGP compared to a bulldozer thats missing the IGP?

Would the SBs still be the video encoding choice?
 
I think it'll shine in the future, but right now? Not really.

If you do lots of work that involve many threads, then depending on price, the bulldozer could be your choice.

My question is, how would a 2500k/2600k perform video encoding with Lucid Virtu using the IGP compared to a bulldozer thats missing the IGP?

Would the SBs still be the video encoding choice?
Isn't it that sync Z68 feature that uses the GPU?
 
If this is true then it doesn't mean AMD made a mistake...
I am no fan boy and have actually have a 2500k. But I can see that AMD needed bulldozer to set up a new generation of architecture.

You have to remember that:
A) These things overclock far better that 1090t's (almost 1ghz higher if the leaks are to be believed).

B) The Bulldozer architecture is only going to get sweeter as more revisions generation are released.

I imagine my next CPU could likely be an AMD for this reason....
 
The architecture should make it easier to "Throw cores at it" for the future.
However, I'm sure Intel aren't going to keep releasing quads as mainstream.
Once hex,octo become mainstream, you can bet Intel will be on it too.

If Software gets a massive boost in utilising cores, it could catch Intel underhand, and AMD could possibly ramp out some CPU's with x amounts of modules quite easily you'd hope.
 
Except they've called it an 8 core, not a 4 core.
So no, thinking of it as a 4 core doing 8 threads isn't a good thing.

Well that's just marketing isn't it, 8 core obviously sounds a lot better than 4 core if you're doing your shopping in PC World.

8 core BD much closer resembles a quad core with a type of 'Hyperthreading on steroids' than it does a true 8 core.
 
Well that's just marketing isn't it, 8 core obviously sounds a lot better than 4 core if you're doing your shopping in PC World.

8 core BD much closer resembles a quad core with a type of 'Hyperthreading on steroids' than it does a true 8 core.

No it doesn't.
BD's cores much more resembles cores than an Intel 2600k core resembles two cores.
The only thing about these cores, is they share some resources.

But they're not 8 individual true cores if that's what you're getting it.

Also, a module isn't limited to two cores IIRC.
I think they should have called it a 4 core personally (Module = core). But it's not, and so thinking of it as a quad core is weird.
 
If this is true then it doesn't mean AMD made a mistake...

B) The Bulldozer architecture is only going to get sweeter as more revisions generation are released.

B) does not help the user who parts cash for the first revision though

I see what you allude to though
 
Even i'm having trouble believing this one...cant be true surely...:eek::confused::mad:

bulpack.jpg
 
Isn't it that sync Z68 feature that uses the GPU?

Lucid Virtu lets you use a Sandy Bridge IGP for things like QuickSync whilst using a separate GPU. So if you have a Z68 motherboard and a separate GPU you get to have an awesome gaming and number crunching machine (overclocking) and also a mean encoder (QuickSync).
 
Lucid Virtu lets you use a Sandy Bridge IGP for things like QuickSync whilst using a separate GPU. So if you have a Z68 motherboard and a separate GPU you get to have an awesome gaming and number crunching machine (overclocking) and also a mean encoder (QuickSync).

Cheers for the elaboration.
Kind of helps for a 2500k to stay on top of the 8150 in apps that work with QS.
 
But they're not 8 individual true cores if that's what you're getting it.

Also, a module isn't limited to two cores IIRC.
I think they should have called it a 4 core personally (Module = core). But it's not, and so thinking of it as a quad core is weird.

It is a bit of a reversal for AMD. Remember all the original marketing from AMD that they had the only true quad core design, whereas Intel just stuck 2 dual cores together to make quad core Kentsfield. Trouble for AMD was, Intel's approach actually worked very well indeed. Now AMD themselves don't seem to have "true" 6 core and 8 core designs anymore with Bulldozer. All depends on what you are actually doing with the CPU
 
It is a bit of a reversal for AMD. Remember all the original marketing from AMD that they had the only true quad core design, whereas Intel just stuck 2 dual cores together to make quad core Kentsfield. Trouble for AMD was, Intel's approach actually worked very well indeed. Now AMD themselves don't seem to have "true" 6 core and 8 core designs anymore with Bulldozer.

Yeah, they've basically made an 8 core consisting of 4 dual cores :p.
Although, the "True quad core" was just marketing, the Q6600 destroyed the Phenom's.
 
I don't see why people are getting their knickers in a twist. There's obviously something funky going on in some benchmarks where performance isn't correct.

Given that for the CH V board, newest BIOS is 3 versions ahead of publicly released (and half these results are on 2 versions ahead), AMD are obviously still working feverishly to optimise things in certain usage scenarios and generally tune it.

The fact that AMD claim (in the leaked slides) very quick x264 & Handbrake performance (similar kinds of instructions / parts of the processor used to - for example - Cinebench) tends to suggest that once either the software or BIOS are tuned, you'll see much better performance than some of these anomalies indicate. That said, the SuperPi numbers might be as good as it gets ... but who cares.

If 'IPC' was so much lower in all usage scenarios, you wouldn't see decent performance in games (which they also claim).
 
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