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Sunday, November 25, 2007

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AMD Phenom X3 8750 CPU Review

Multi-core CPUs have taken over the world! Actually, today there are very few single core CPUs sold by Intel or AMD today and the vast majority of CPUs sold are Core 2 Duo or AMD Athlon X2s with only a small portion of the P
C market being single core CPUs (mainly on the low end Celerons). AMD released their Phenom Quad Core CPUs last year to a mixed reception based mainly on the TLB Erratum error.
Last month AMD released their revision B3 Phenom which fixed the Erratum and brought Quad Core CPUs to the AMD platform with decent performance for the price. Today, AMD is launching a variant of the Phenom with three cores instead of two or four. Triple Core CPUs should be an interesting comparison versus two or four. AMD is launching three CPUs today, the X3 8750, the X3 8650 and the X3 8450. AMD kindly sent an X3 8750 for test and that’s the CPU on the test bench.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

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Multi-core CPUs have taken over the world! Actually, today there are very few single core CPUs sold by Intel or AMD today and the vast majority of CPUs sold are Core 2 Duo or AMD Athlon X2s with only a small portion of the PC market being single core CPUs (mainly on the low end Celerons). AMD released their Phenom Quad Core CPUs last year to a mixed reception based mainly on the TLB Erratum error.
Last month AMD released their revision B3 Phenom which fixed the Erratum and brought Quad Core CPUs to the AMD platform with decent performance for the price. Today, AMD is launching a variant of the Phenom with three cores instead of two or four. Triple Core CPUs should be an interesting comparison versus two or four. AMD is launching three CPUs today, the X3 8750, the X3 8650 and the X3 8450. AMD kindly sent an X3 8750 for test and that’s the CPU on the test bench.

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AMD Phenom 9850 X4 Black Edition CPU Review

It has been a long time coming but AMD has finally entered the Quad Core CPU market with their Phenom 9xxx series CPUs. Intel released their Core 2 Quad CPUs early last year and AMD followed with their first four core CPUs in September of 2007. Today they have two lines of processors with Quad Cores, the Phenom and the Opteron platform. The Phenom is their consumer line of desktop quad ore CPUs and the Opteron is their server and workstation line.
So being a little late to the table with Phenom can be a good and bad thing depending on whether the new processor outperforms the competition from Intel at the same price range. Early versions of the Phenom were buggy with a TLB erratum that caused benchmarks to be lower than expected. But enough on the topic of the TLB erratum has already been published by others that I won't belabor the point. Today the CPU on the review bench is AMD's Phenom 9850 Black Edition, a quad core CPU running at a clock of 2.5GHz by default. It should be interesting to compare it against a Quad Core Intel CPU, but the price ranges are a bit different, and the early problems will hopefully be fixed by this new B3 Stepping of the Phenom. So let's see what the new CPU brings to the plate and what benefits it adds to the AMD line.

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Intel has dominated the playing field of CPU technology for the last two decades, and even though rival company AMD for awhile stole some of their fire with their FX series CPUs, Intel is once again leading the pack, and without competition. Where is AMD? Obviously lost in limbo once again as they try and figure out which direction to go in, and try and solve the issues involving their other underdog company, ATI. I am still a bit baffled why a company that had barely started to make headway in the industry bought another company traveling down that same very road. When you are treading water yourself, the last thing you should want is something else to weigh you down. A drowning man doesn't scream out, Hey somebody toss me a rock. Who knows, maybe they will pull a rabbit out of there hat, it has happened before, but for now, both ATI and AMD are trailing behind their counterparts in their common industry. NVIDIA rules the VGA world and Intel owns the CPU market.
Intel's new QX6850 breaths a healthy bit of speed to the LGA775 platform, and allows the latest DDR3 memory to be taken advantage of on motherboards that support this new feature. Enthusiasts, gamers and the; I want the best crowd all will take notice of these new things and start daydreaming of going out and upgrading their systems. How well the general public will embrace this and buy into Intel's plan remains to be seen, but the high-end systems will all have to make the change to take advantage of these new features. AMD has yet to make an announcement that they have a hidden weapon ready to tackle Intel and are most likely trying to play the catch up game in a big way, enthusiasts that once flocked to the AMD banner are scratching their collective heads pondering just what their going to do in the wake of the new Intel dominance. If you want DDR3 and you want a FSB of 1333MHz, the Intel platform is currently the only game in town that supports these new features. The CPU we review today is Intel's new flagship CPU and offers performance levels yet to be seen in the desktop arena.