By
Tom Krazit
Monday, July 17 2006 10:51 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39375793,00.htm
Even Steven Spielberg's "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" didn't get these kind
of reviews.
Independent chip reviewers across the Internet unveiled the results of their
tests of Intel's upcoming Core 2 Duo processor for desktops, or the chip
formerly known as Conroe. For the first time in several years, Intel has a clear
performance lead in a wide variety of benchmarks for office applications, games
and other software.
Back in February, before Intel had released details about the Core
architecture used to build Conroe, Mooly Eden, vice president and general
manager of Intel's Mobile Platforms group, claimed that, in general, the Core
architecture chips would deliver a 20
percent performance lead over comparable chips from Advanced Micro Devices.
While it's hard to assemble an overall figure based on dozens of benchmark
results, the Core 2 Duo meets that target in some areas and comes in shy of that
figure in others. But its lead was clear in the minds of reviewers, who did not
hold back their praise for Intel's new chip.
CNET.com, which like CNET News.com is published by CNET Networks, said "the
Core 2 Duo chips include not only the fastest desktop chips on the market, but
also the most cost-effective and among the most power-efficient." Most reviewers
evaluated three chips that will formally
launch later this month: the Core 2 Extreme X6800, the Core 2 Duo E6700 and
the E6600. The Extreme version runs at the fastest clock speed and costs a lot
more than the E6700 and E6600, but it will be the most powerful desktop PC chip on the planet when it is released.
Anandtech, which was one of the sites that was granted
access to a preproduction version of Conroe, declared that "Intel's Core 2
Extreme X6800 didn't lose a single benchmark in our comparison; not a single
one." Even Intel's mainstream E6700 and E6600 processors beat AMD's
highest-performing chip, the Athlon FX-62, in several benchmarks.
Sharky's Extreme, another hardware review site, was equally
impressed with the new Core 2 Duo chips. "The launch of the Core 2 processor
line has hit the market with a bang, and offers up an incredible combination of
performance and value, coupled with low heat and power specifications. These
processors are so good, that it's difficult to highlight any real
negatives."
On PC World's own benchmark, WorldBench, the E6700 processor
outscored AMD's FX-62 processor by a substantial margin, and the gap was even
wider between the FX-62 and the Core 2 Extreme. PC gamers, who have been solidly
behind AMD's Athlon 64 processors almost since the day they were released, will
have to rethink their stance based on some of the gaming benchmark figures,
according to PCMag.com.
The language used to describe the Core 2 Duo chips was almost reverent,
perhaps in part because it has been so
long since Intel has been this competitive from a performance standpoint in
the desktop PC market. Intel's Netburst chips, which the world knows as the
Pentium 4 and Pentium D processors, trailed AMD's Athlon 64 chips on many of
these same tests and also consumed a great deal more power than AMD's offerings.
But the performance tide has turned, and the power consumption of the new
processors meets or beats AMD's chips in tests done by several reviewers.
AMD is using 2006 to catch its breath after its surge over the last few
years. The company isn't planning any major overhauls to its Athlon 64 X2
processors this year, but has introduced support for faster DDR2 memory and
announced plans to launch a gaming platform known as 4x4 that
can accommodate two Athlon 64 X2 processors. It's unclear whether that will be
enough to overcome the performance of Conroe, but in 2007 AMD
plans to make more sweeping changes to its processors, including support for
quad-core designs.
Beneath all the critical praise, however, is the fact that most PC users
won't be pushing their PCs near the limit of the Core 2 Duo's performance. For
those who just like to check e-mail or manage their finances, most any processor
will do. But gamers and multimedia enthusiasts are influential forces in the PC
market, and praise from that demographic tends to carry over into the larger
market.
Some of the reviews noted that AMD is about to cut prices on its desktop
chips to keep pace with the Core 2 Duo. An AMD representative confirmed pricing
changes are in the works. "AMD will perform an aggressive price move in July to
ensure we maintain price-performance leadership in desktop products," the
company said in a statement. Intel also plans to cut prices on its older Pentium
D chips when the Core 2 Duo chips start to arrive later this month.