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Subject: Re: New processor benchmarks

Author: Ed Panek

Date: 08:46:49 03/22/01

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On March 22, 2001 at 11:07:24, Ed Panek wrote:

>AMD Athlon 1.33GHz    (100%)DONE WITH 266MHZ FSB SPECS
>AMD Athlon 1.2GHz     (90%)200 MHZ FSB SPECS
>AMD Athlon 1.1GHz     (83%)
>IntelPentium 4 1.3GHz (82%)
>AMDAthlon(T-Bird)1GHz (76%)
>Intel Xeon III 1GHz   (74%)
>Intel Pentium III 1GHz(71%)
>Intel Pentium III  866(62%)
>PowerMac G4 733       (61%)
>AMD Duron 850         (60%)
>AMD Athlon 800        (58%)
>AMD Duron 800         (57%)
>Intel Celeron 800     (53%)
>AMD Duron 700         (51%)
>iMac SE (G3 600)      (50%)
>Intel Celeron 700     (45%)
>VIA Cyrix III 700     (27%)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  Power & Thermal Specification Comparison
>CPU                 Core Voltage Maximum Current Draw  MaximumThermalDissipation
>AMD Athlon 1.33GHz     1.75v           42A                     73W
>AMD Athlon 1.30GHz     1.75v           41A                     71W
>AMD Athlon 1.0GHz      1.75v           31A                     54W
>Intel Pentium 4 1.5GHz 1.70v           43A                     52W
>
>
>There appear to be some slight physical changes to the new Athlon 1.30 and 1.33.
>
>
>
>
>
>                                     In February/March the Athlon should gain
>another clock step or two taking it up to 1.33GHz and
>                                                  possibly up to 1.4GHz.  Both
>of these CPUs will still be based on the current Thunderbird core and they
>                                                  should generate a considerable
>amount of heat.  Luckily the 1.4GHz Athlon should be the last
>                                                  Thunderbird based processor
>for AMD, paving the way for the 1.5GHz Athlon based on the
>                                                  cooler running Palomino core
>to be released sometime in the May - June timeframe."
>
>It looks like the Athlon is not going to get any more than 256KB of L2 cache
>until the next die-shrink, which will be to
>                                        a 0.13-micron process in the first half
>of 2002.
>
>
>This was outsourced from Anandtech and CPUscorecoard by Ed Panek



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