AMD versus Pentium4
- Will Robinson
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AMD versus Pentium4
I was going to build a new box with a P4 3.4 Ghz 550 Prescott processor. I know 'Why a Presscott? Well because I want to use the Asus P5AD2 Premium mobo that's why. I had hoped to overclock it to somewhere near 4Ghz...
Anyway the vendor pissed me off and said they shipped the order but only the video card showed up and *now* they say the mobo, cpu and memory is back ordered. Bastages! So I figured I'd try to come up with an alternative while I wait and decide if I should cancel the order or not.
The problem is I want to keep the vid card Saphire X800XT PCI-Express so I need to use a mobo that has PCI-E slot in place of a VGA slot.
The Nvidia nForce4 comes to mind but I don't even know which AMD CPU would be comprable to a P4 in the 4Ghz range.
So, what's the AMD alternative to a 4Ghz P4?
Of course all suggestions and flames welcomed....even Mobius
Anyway the vendor pissed me off and said they shipped the order but only the video card showed up and *now* they say the mobo, cpu and memory is back ordered. Bastages! So I figured I'd try to come up with an alternative while I wait and decide if I should cancel the order or not.
The problem is I want to keep the vid card Saphire X800XT PCI-Express so I need to use a mobo that has PCI-E slot in place of a VGA slot.
The Nvidia nForce4 comes to mind but I don't even know which AMD CPU would be comprable to a P4 in the 4Ghz range.
So, what's the AMD alternative to a 4Ghz P4?
Of course all suggestions and flames welcomed....even Mobius
- Mr. Perfect
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Well considering how soundly the top Athlon 64s smack the 3.6GHz around when gaming, I'd say get a 4000+(heh, duh) or a similar top-end Athlon 64/FX.
- Lothar
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why stop there, Krom? For more money than you have, you can get a 96-processor opteron system. Or maybe you could move up a notch from there...
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Not to mention heat your house during the winter without having to run the furnace. Just run a fan, and connect a hose from a duct to the fan and then from the fan to the back of the computer and you're set. You'll be cooling your computer Sickone style.Krom wrote:If you had 96 opterons running, you could emulate any video card you want in software.
www.cyberpowersystem.com it's actually cheaper than buildin ur own rig. check it out
Not if you select quaility parts.Mr.Rsm wrote:www.cyberpowersystem.com it's actually cheaper than buildin ur own rig. check it out
- Krom
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Aggreed, I glanced through that site and I was not impressed.fliptw wrote:Not if you select quaility parts.Mr.Rsm wrote:www.cyberpowersystem.com it's actually cheaper than buildin ur own rig. check it out
- Mobius
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The shocking truth about the P4-560 is revealed at THG:
http://www.tomshardware.com/cpu/20041114/index.html
http://www.tomshardware.com/cpu/20041114/index.html
- Mr. Perfect
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- Mr. Perfect
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Not really. if the Semprons where 64 bit they'd eat into the Athlon 64 market.
Anand article wrote:Unfortunately, in addition to the reduced amount of cache, all of the Semprons lack 64-bit support. That isn't a major concern yet, but it could be in another six months when we see the launch of Windows XP-64 and 64-bit applications. For those that are interested in 64-bit computing, you will want to spend the extra money for the Athlon 64.
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AMD = Nice Mobo
- SkyNet
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Woodchip, I'm an undergraduate at school right now studying to be a computer programmer, and from what I've been told the reason for 64 bit is for larger memory address allocation. Not really for integer values because 2^32 is quite a large number, but mainly for pointer opperations.
See pointers are addresses to addresses. So it's an address that points to another address. I know it's very confusing, but when you program you'll have to learn this. The issue with a 32-bit system is that you can only have so many unique addresses before you're out of memory.
There is a reason why systems only allow for 4GB max. This is one of them. So it's 4GB per CPU as each CPU get's it's on 32-bit instruction set. Well for 64-bit we effectively double the amount of unique addresses so if I were to guess at this, we'll probably start seeing single CPU chips with a max of 8GB memory possible assuming that it will double in RAM but I'm making an assumption that it's 1:1.
Anyway off of all this crap, moving to a 64-bit chip isn't going to help you if you continue to run 32-bit programs, and this will probably be the case for a few years yet, but eventually if you don't have a 64-bit system you'll find that programs wont be able to run on your 32-bit system because you don't have enough addressing space or in other words they were compiled for 64-bit machines. You've got some time yet before that happens.
One last note though. A 64-bit machine isn't more expensive then a 32-bit Intel machine so not updating to one seems kinda prohibitive to me.
See pointers are addresses to addresses. So it's an address that points to another address. I know it's very confusing, but when you program you'll have to learn this. The issue with a 32-bit system is that you can only have so many unique addresses before you're out of memory.
There is a reason why systems only allow for 4GB max. This is one of them. So it's 4GB per CPU as each CPU get's it's on 32-bit instruction set. Well for 64-bit we effectively double the amount of unique addresses so if I were to guess at this, we'll probably start seeing single CPU chips with a max of 8GB memory possible assuming that it will double in RAM but I'm making an assumption that it's 1:1.
Anyway off of all this crap, moving to a 64-bit chip isn't going to help you if you continue to run 32-bit programs, and this will probably be the case for a few years yet, but eventually if you don't have a 64-bit system you'll find that programs wont be able to run on your 32-bit system because you don't have enough addressing space or in other words they were compiled for 64-bit machines. You've got some time yet before that happens.
One last note though. A 64-bit machine isn't more expensive then a 32-bit Intel machine so not updating to one seems kinda prohibitive to me.
- Mobius
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You need to do some more study I'm afraid:SkyNet wrote:Well for 64-bit we effectively double the amount of unique addresses so if I were to guess at this, we'll probably start seeing single CPU chips with a max of 8GB memory possible assuming that it will double in RAM but I'm making an assumption that it's 1:1.
"The AMD64 platform can address 4 petabytes of physical memory, and a 64-bit CPU can potentially address up to 18 exabytes."
4 petabytes = 4,096 terabytes = 4,194,304 gigabytes
18 exabytes = 18,432 petabytes.
fliptw - he stated that 64-bit memory addresses result in a doubling of maximum memory capacity compared to 32-bit processors. However, the difference is actually two to the power of 32 - several billion - not just two.
64-bit chips, by themselves, do provide no performance increase over 32-bit models; you have to write software for it. And it's mainly a precision/mem capacity increase anyway.
64-bit chips, by themselves, do provide no performance increase over 32-bit models; you have to write software for it. And it's mainly a precision/mem capacity increase anyway.