WHEN, AT today's IDF opening, Louis Burns demonstrated a high-definition video stream running on a "mystery" desktop processor, everyone must hve thought it was the upcoming Prescott part. Wrong! It was the (also upcoming), previously unheard of, even at The Inq, Intel® Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition 3.20 GHz , with an extra 2 Megabytes. In Intel's own words, "this new processor will be targeted at high-end gamers and computing power users."
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Intel® Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition 3.20 GHz
Collapse
X
-
Predictable
Wonder who will be able to afford it?If there's artificial intelligence, there's bound to be some artificial stupidity.
Jeremy Clarkson "806 brake horsepower..and that on that limp wrist faerie liquid the Americans call petrol, if you run it on the more explosive jungle juice we have in Europe you'd be getting 850 brake horsepower..."
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jammrock
close to a grand knowing Intel.
Jammrock
Given the price of AMD's forthcoming Athlon 64 FX, we'd expect the 3.2GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition to be priced accordingly. We are hearing that the processor will be priced around $740 in 1,000 unit quantities.Why is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?
Comment
-
Just read about the chip at ZDNet. The P4EE will sport 2 MB of Level 3 cache, ala the Xeon MP chips. They say the performance boost is significant.
For $700+ it better wipe my @$$ after I take a dump.
PS - Those are some crappy looking boxes that they demoed the P4EE on, from the Anandtech link above. They could have at least shelling out for a CoolerMaster or Lian Li case for the demo. Or had one of their bed buddies like Dell build them a PC with one of their decent looking XPS cases. If you are releasing an "extreme" CPU for "extreme" gamers, you better make the box look "extreme" damn it!!
JammrockLast edited by Jammrock; 17 September 2003, 05:58.“Inside every sane person there’s a madman struggling to get outâ€
–The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett
Comment
-
Intel made a Xeon 3.06 with an additional 1MB of L3 cache to top the low-end part of the Xeon line. Tom's Hardware tested it and found out it did not increase the preformance that much, in some programs not at all.
In addition it was beaten by the Opteron...
Comment
-
I would think it really is based on xeon pressed into service for desktops.
Also there will be quite a few thing that will use the extra cache, particulary in workstations.
But I would think with HT and a fat cache this would be one smooth CPU, eg very few stall's you would get a very consistant frame rates out of it. It's going to be very nice running multiple intensive app's.
But I still like the amd64 better
Comment
Comment