mdma wrote:
Have you checked the clock speeds Hammer?
Yes, but the PPC 970’s pipeline depth is not as deep as the Pentium 4, thus potential for clock increases may not as positive compared Pentium 4. The current Northwood's transistor switching went as high as ~4.1Ghz via LN2 (liquid nitrogen).
(Not including double speed (poor performing) floating point unit i.e. IF the Northwood is rated 3 Ghz, its floating-point unit would be double pumped to 6 Ghz).
Intel does keep in mind that IPC will play an important role in the near future i.e. refer to Prescott’s architectural improvements.
1.4 Ghz vs 3Ghz and it still pisses on the P4.
Note that Intel still has IPC bias “Pentium M” (@1.6Ghz) which roughly PR(unofficially) rated at Pentium 4 @ ~2.5 Ghz ~2.6Ghz for office, legacy floating points and branch extensive applications. It’s pipeline depth is about similar to AMD’s K8.
Intel has two solutions regards to X86.
IBM (and AMD) may approach chip design from IPC bias then work on the clock speed, while Intel may approach chip design from clock speed bias then work on IPC (the case is true for Pentium 4 family not for Pentium M family). Performance is one factor for comparison but the cost will be another.
Just hope IBM learns from the DEC’s Alpha experience i.e. performance alone doesn’t win the war.
PS Intel's IA-64 department may have duplicated DEC Alpha’s mistake.
I do keep track of the incoming flag chips i.e. IBM’s PPC 970, AMD’s K8 (has been released) and Intel’s Prescott. Just look at my news submissions (via Aorg's userinfo).