Posted on 08/05/2002 1:16:54 AM PDT by JameRetief
NEW YORK, Aug 4 (Reuters) - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. AMD.N is hailed as having the "next big thing" with its upcoming eighth-generation microprocessor, and this could make the depressed stock a long-term winner, Barron's said.
The Aug. 5 edition of the Wall Street financial weekly cites Fred Hick, publisher of the newsletter High-Tech Strategist, as saying AMD's next line of microprocessors, code-named Hammer, can give AMD a multiyear lead on arch-rival Intel Corp. INTC.O .
AMD's edge could lie in the move by Intel to make its Itanium chips work only with advanced software that capitalizes on its high-speed features, the article said. By contrast, AMD's Hammer PC chips are compatible both with hundreds of thousands of existing software programs as well as new ones.
AMD is set to release its first Hammer chips during the current third-quarter and a "backward compatible" version to run powerful computers known as servers is due out in the first half of 2003, the article said.
This could lead AMD to gain back ground over the next three to four years that it has lost to Intel. With AMD's stock at $7.31 and market capitalization around $2.5 billion (compared with Intel's $110 billion), "AMD might just regain the exalted investment status it enjoyed in the giddy days of 2000," Barron's said.
And it is likely that it will be even faster than that.
I heard the first Hammers will debut at 3400+, which would be about 2.2 Ghz or around there.
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Waaaaaaaahhhh - please tell me you're kidding...
Will we never hear the end of this "megahertz myth" BS?
It's not a myth, it's true.
That's the plan Stan.
At that speed it outperforms a 2 GHz Pentium 4 (on AMDs benchmark of course).
These puppies are smoking fast.
Which part of the long vs short pipeline engineering trade-off don't you understand? Do all opcodes execute in the same number of cycles in your conceptual universe?
Clock cycles are definitly not clock cycles.
That being said to achive very high clockspeeds everybodys needs to go to the many stage pipeline solution. Which is why Motorola lost it's clock for clock speed advantage (such as it ever had it, never did on floating point) when it pushed the PowerPC up to 1 GHz. Look at the internals, op codes that used to execute in 3 cycles now take 5 or 6.
I understand it just fine. I am, however, still waiting for official SPEC results for the G4 to show me just how badly the G4 smokes the P4/AMD chips...
What's that? No official results? Maybe because the unofficial results floating around make the G4 look like it sucks s*** harder than a shop vac in a septic tank? Hmmmm.... ;)
The bottom line is that nobody cares how "efficient" a processor is, despite Steve Jobs's year-long tapdance - it's not a car, where the mileage means something to the end user. Either the raw performance is there, or it isn't, and it sounds to me like the AMD chips have got it where it counts, unlike the G4, which should be all the selling points they need. Unlike the G4, when it's unleashed on some actual, real-world benches (insofar as that's a meaningful statement), it'll show what it's capable of, and AMD shouldn't have to fall back on silly arguments about how wonderfully "efficient" their chips are...
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