Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 13th Nov 2008 13:32 UTC
Intel Not too long ago, Intel unleashed Nehalem, or Core i7, upon the world. The new Core i7 chips are not just new processors; they also introduce an entirely new platform, and this combination produces some impressive performance figures, according to Ars Technica. "The new performance gap between Nehalem and pretty much everything else of comparable cost is the result of upgrades to both the CPUs core architecture and the platform on which the multicore chip now runs." Respected in-depth review sites AnandTech and Tom's Hardware agree with Ars' findings.
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RE[2]: And yet...
by mdoverkil on Thu 13th Nov 2008 20:28 UTC in reply to "RE: And yet..."
mdoverkil
Member since:
2005-09-30

I would take anything on the Inquirer with a very large grain of salt.

Here are some database benchmarks from Anandtech, which were published today

http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3456&p=1

"As you've seen, AMD is still competitive with Intel's 3.0 GHz Harpertown in the database workloads that we've shown here. We were quite surprised that Shanghai was able to meet and, in some cases, pass Harpertown at various workload levels in some of the benchmarks. Obviously, when it comes to power, AMD is still leading this space by a significant margin. FB-DIMMs obliterate any power efficiency in Intel's processors, especially when you have eight (or more in some cases) of them present in a server."

There is also price to consider in the equation. Sure, Intel maybe a faster solution but at what cost?

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