Originally posted by Backtothemac
Now, DDR bus?!?!?! No, it is a force multiplier. Call it what it is. And the Athlon operates at a true 200 or 266MHZ, without force multipliers. The quad multiplier that you speak of on the PIV is a friggin joke. That is why the Athlon can kick A$$ on a PIV. It takes them 800MHZ to match an Athlon. Sad. Intel blows.
Here, have a cluestick.. please beat yourself with it..
🙂
the Athlon's frontside bus is 100Mhz (in the case of the original Slot A Athlons and the initial Thunderbird core Athlon's, and the Duron for that matter) or 133Mhz (>1Ghz Tbirds/AthlonXP/AthlonMP) double data rate. incase the concept of DDR is lost on you, here's a diagram :-
a , indicates a piece of data
/--\ = clockpulse
___ = gap between clockpulses
Single Data Rate :
___,/--\___,/--\___,/--\___
Double Data Rate :
___,/--\,___,/--\,___,/--\,__
The Pentium 4 on the other hand, uses a 100/133Mhz Quad pumped bus. the diagram for this looks something like.
___,/,-,\,___,/,-,\,___,/,-,\,___
the command rate in all cases remains on the the initial rising edge at 100 or 133Mhz, but data can be transferred on all cycles. (except of course the cycles being used for command data.)
Oh, and just WHAT THE HELL is a "Force Multiplier" ?, maybe I should go play Jedi Outcast again?.. hmm?
The Athlon kicks the P4's ass for the same reason that the G4 _can_ kick the Pentium 3's ass, it's a more efficient core, although it is beginning to feel the limits of it's 2.1GB/s memory interface at the high end, the 2.2Ghz+ Pentium 4's (particularly the 133QDR parts) begin to pull away from the >1.73Ghz AthlonXP's simply because the P4's massive clock for clock inefficiency is outweighed by
a) it's clockspeed lead
b) the huge memory subsystem keeping the processor pipeline fed
BTW, Solvs, PC800 Rdram is 400Mhz DDR, PC1066 Rdram is 533Mhz DDR (it scales high in clockspeed because it's such a narrow bus)