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System Name | My3yrOldBaby |
---|---|
Processor | Intel C2Q Q6600 G0 2.4GHz (3.6 Ghz @ 1.400V) |
Motherboard | eVGA 790 FTW (Analogue) 132-YW-E179-A1 |
Cooling | Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme (Push+Pull: Silverstone 120mm) |
Memory | 8GB G.Skill DDR3 2x4GB 1866 (running 1600) + 2GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3 1x2GB 1333 (running 1600) |
Video Card(s) | eVGA 8800GTX 768MB |
Storage | (2) WD Raptor 150GB SATA [RAID 0], (4) Seagate Barracuda 320GB SATA [RAID 0+1] |
Display(s) | Acer 20" - AL2017, Acer 22"W - AL2216WBD |
Case | Thermaltake Armor w/ 25cm Fan & Extra Front iCage |
Audio Device(s) | OnBoard |
Power Supply | Silverstone 1000W - ST1000 |
Software | Windows XP Pro x64 |
If I read the last article about the phenoms correctly, at the press conference/announcement from AMD, they said that the triple core CPUs are really their quad core chip with one bad core.
It said that the fact that AMD is doing true quad-core (instead of intel's 2x dual core setup in Q6600, etc), is that the risk ratio increases tremendously of having a die go bad. So, they test each CPU, and sell the ones with a single bad die as "Triple Core" CPUs... its really a pretty good efficiency strategy, but I myself now will not trust the Quad Core originals or the Triple Cores...
FOUND THE ARTICLE!
I'm not down with "We'll sell the broke ones for cheaper..."
It said that the fact that AMD is doing true quad-core (instead of intel's 2x dual core setup in Q6600, etc), is that the risk ratio increases tremendously of having a die go bad. So, they test each CPU, and sell the ones with a single bad die as "Triple Core" CPUs... its really a pretty good efficiency strategy, but I myself now will not trust the Quad Core originals or the Triple Cores...
FOUND THE ARTICLE!
http://www.tomshardware.com/2007/11/19/the_spider_weaves_its_web/page2.html said:The downside to the single-die quad-core approach is a greater risk of manufacturing defects and thus lower yields. If even one of the cores suffers a manufacturing defect, the entire quad-core CPU becomes defective. AMD has found a solution, if this should ever happen, though. If one of the cores is indeed defective, it is deactivated, and the processor is sold as a three-core model. In an interview in Warsaw, AMD now officially confirmed that the tri-core models are indeed quad-cores with one deactivated core. In the end, this is a boon to the consumer. Where Intel would sell a processor with one defective core in the notebook sector, since the desktop line does not include a single-core Core 2 processor, AMD's customers will be able to purchase an inexpensive tri-core CPU. However, for now it is unclear when the Phenom X3 processors will go on sale.
I'm not down with "We'll sell the broke ones for cheaper..."