Intel is
confident, with a few benchmark exceptions, that it will still have the fastest
x86 processor in the market following today's launch of
AMD's
Barcelona
Opteron processor.
"We feel quite good about our performance," Kirk Skaugen, general manager for
Intel's server platforms group, told
vnunet.com
in an interview on 5 September.
AMD had claimed that its processor would outpace Intel's by 25 to 30 per cent
on certain workloads.
The chipmaker has consistently highlighted Barcelona's performance on the
SpecFP_rate2006 benchmark, which shows the performance of floating point
calculations common in scientific modelling applications.
But Skaugen argued that the benchmark represents only three per cent of the
workloads in the enterprise, and that companies depend mostly on a chip's
performance for Java, web, transaction and integer applications.
AMD released a set of nine benchmarks on Monday including SpecFP_rate2006.
All benchmark data was based on a 2GHz Barcelona.
Compared to the best published benchmark score for Intel's quad-core Xeon,
AMD outperformed the competition on all benchmarks.
Conspicuously missing, however, is the Opteron's score for a benchmark that
measures integer performance, a type of workload that emphasises parallel tasks.
AMD executives have admitted that Intel demonstrates better performance on
the benchmark, attributing it to the Xeon's larger cache memory.
AMD does have a more elegant design for its quad-core processor, however. The
firm has joined four cores on a single die, whereas Intel is essentially putting
two dual-core chips in a single package.
But AMD puts itself at a potential disadvantage as it will ship only 2GHz
Opterons at the launch, while its competitor already offers 3GHz models.
Intel is also scheduled to release its Penryn 45nm processors early next
year, which are expected to offer an additional performance boost.
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