Either way, I'm still trying to keep my rig in the game as I need to OC to get the framerates that I'm comfortable with in CPU-demanding titles like Supreme Commander or World in Conflict. It sucks for me right now. In the mean time, I'm waiting to see HT 3.1 results and 45nm Phenoms, hoping that there will finally be some peace in this PC gaming world by balancing both worlds for customer satisfaction. AMD and Intel need to stop fighting like 3 year olds in a sandbox and get a f**king grip in the name of customer convenience by letting devs release game titles that have 100% multi-core and single support instead of making Core2Duo live a lie thinking it has two cores when its just 2 cores on a die instead of a silicon piece like AMD so there won't be any difficulty achieving the fence-sitter's interest when buying their CPUs. Craigslist and Ebay is alway on steroids selling CPUs to each other like hundreds of beach balls at a live concert thanks to the same thing being sold over and over again due to better CPUs coming out.
First off, Core2 dual cores are a single die, not 2 dies on a chip like pD was. Besides, that doesn't mean squat anyway. All that matters is performance. Phenom is 4 cores on 1 die, yet the intel quad, which is 2 dual cores pasted to a chip, stomps all over it.
Secondly, Intel and AMD have nothing to do with devs not releasing more multi threaded/scalable software. Nothing they do prevents it. The only thing preventing it is developer laziness and/or cost for having to buy different development tools.
Third, HT 3.1 isn't going to make a damn bit of difference in a desktop. We haven't even gotten close to the limits of the current HT. It is not a bottleneck in anything (except multi-socketed servers). Increasing the speed of something that isn't a bottleneck to begin with, wont show any significant performance gains.