![]() The memory hierarchy of Phenom has been improved over the current K8 architecture there's now an 元 cache shared by all cores and a higher efficiency DDR2 memory controller, which is needed given that there are now more cores vying for the same amount of bandwidth.ĪMD has officially confirmed that Phenom will support up to DDR2-1066, reasserting AMD's commitment to the memory technology it switched to a year ago. ![]() The 元 cache happens to run on the same voltage plane and at the same frequency as the Northbridge, compounding the performance benefits of using a new "plus-socket" motherboard (Socket-AM2+/Socket-1207+). The benefit of doing this is not only power savings, but AMD has indicated that it can actually run the Northbridge faster than the CPU cores (by 200 - 400MHz) which will improve performance. If you buy a new Socket-AM2+/Socket-1207+ motherboard, then the CPU cores and Northbridge can run at separate voltages/frequencies. Phenom will work in current Socket-AM2/Socket-1207 motherboards with a BIOS update, but it loses the ability to run its Northbridge and CPU cores at separate voltages/clock frequencies. we didn't see any benefit with monolithic dual core vs. Phenom will also be the first monolithic quad-core x86 processor to hit the market, which does have some technical advantages but we're not sold on whether or not we'll see any tangible real world benefits over Intel's multiple die approach (e.g. The core is an evolution of the current K8 architecture, with a lot of attention placed on SSE performance and other general IPC enhancements. Either AMD is doing its best to hide a rough ramp of Phenom or it is sitting on a very powerful weapon to combat Intel with, and we can't get any indication of which it is.Īrchitecturally, we've already said all there is to say about Phenom. At the bottom of the list is AMD's Sempron, which is the only single core brand in the product lineup.ĪMD hasn't updated us on other details for Phenom, which is a bit odd given how much more forthcoming AMD has been privately about other aspects of its microprocessor plans. The current Athlon 64 X2 has been renamed to the Athlon X2 given that both AMD and Intel offer 64-bit processors, dropping the 64 from the name makes sense. The X4 and X2 will be Socket-AM2/AM2+ only and are 100% backwards compatible with current AM2 motherboards. The Phenom X4 and X2 processors are the sensible versions of the Phenom, these are the ones we will most likely be recommending out of AMD's lineup if history holds true. Unfortunately, AMD has once again reversed its decision and Phenom FX processors will be available in both Socket-1207 and Socket-AM2 flavors. ![]() At the Quad FX introduction, AMD indicated that FX processors would be Socket-1207 only, simplifying its product lineup. These processors will be quad-core only and run at the highest clock speeds in AMD's lineup, much like the current Athlon 64 FX. The new AMD line up is as follows:Īt the top of the product lineup we have the Phenom FX processors (codenamed Agena FX). Not quite as odd sounding as the Athlon was when it was launched, but still very much an AMD product name. We've been calling it Barcelona or Agena for several months now, but AMD has finally named its next-generation desktop processors and the new name is Phenom. ![]()
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