Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2000 12:54:47 -0800 From: "Jeremiah Gowdy" <jgowdy@home.com> To: "Heredity Choice" <stork@QNET.COM>, "Allen Landsidel" <all@biosys.net>, "Nick Slager" <nicks@albury.net.au>, "jadream" <jadream@chat.ru> Cc: <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: Re: FBSD & Itanium? Message-ID: <001d01c045d8$507dd450$0100000a@netfinity> References: <005001c045c4$8b05bed0$15c6ddd1@STORK>
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> Yes, an Athlon 600 is cheaper than an Alpha 21164 533 MHz, and about half as > fast. > > I am afraid there is a little more to porting an OS than having gcc for the > processor, especially as FreeBSD is not optimized for portability. FreeBSD > will be ported to the Itanium if people want to make the considerable > effort. So far the Itanium has been all promises and no substance. Why are we comparing 64bit CPUs to 32bit CPUs ? Apples to Oranges if you ask me. I say, wait for the tainted smell of vaporware to disappear, and see who comes out ahead on the Itainium vs Sledgehammer front. I believe for FreeBSD users, Sledgehammer would be the CPU of choice, as AMD claims that in 32bit mode, it would still be the fastest 32bit x86 processor ever released, even if you ignore the 64bit mode altogether. So since FreeBSD is situated in the x86 architecture quite well, seems like AMD would be the only option in this next generation of the Intel/AMD offerings. The Intel Itainium's core is truly emulating x86 (I know all of today's cpus emulate CISC with RISC, however, Itainium's focus isn't x86), the Itainium will certainly perform slower per clock than a Coppermine. Willamette performs slower per clock than Coppermine. So if we say, ok FreeBSD is x86 optimized, what is the x86 cpu market looking like in the next few years, one has to conclude that the newer AMD offerings, especially the Hammer, are the cpus of choice for FreeBSD x86 systems. As for Alpha, I've never used FreeBSD/Alpha, however, I know Alphas are absolutely awesome. My question is, is our Alpha support awesome ? And are people willing to go Alpha ? I'm not saying anything against Alpha, I'm just putting forth my opinion that once it comes out, FreeBSD x86/Hammer combo will be the best option for FreeBSD x86 users. Linux will probably come out with both an Itainium and Hammer version. I believe both such projects are underway. But will they be hack jobs or the real thing ? FreeBSD x86-64 makes sense, it's just another extention of the architecture. Ax8664_CPU :) I have great doubts about willamette and it's design which performs less per clock than the Coppermine, but allows higher clock speeds. Remember the 486 DX4 ? Then comes the Pentium and all those empty mhz the DX4s were hitting were stomped by a greater design. Seems to me the idea shouldn't just be how many gigahertz you can kick, but the design of the core. If you could make a 386 that clocked to 3 ghz, I would rather have a Thunderbird that ran at 1 ghz. My theory is this, if Hammer running in 32bit mode is far far faster than Thunderbird, and Thunderbird is just a little bit faster per clock than Coppermine, and Coppermine is faster per clock than Willamette, the winner is clear. Itainium isn't even entering into the picture, because even Intel says the x86 emulation isn't going to be very fast. It's more of a utility thing, it's there, it's available if you need it. I personally don't see the need for Willamette. They can keep their empty clock speed and all the heat that comes with it. Oh, and one more thing, think about the price difference. How much cheaper do you think the Hammer will be than the Itainium ? And how much more production will AMD have ? AMD Athlon Thunderbird 1 ghz $254 Intel Pentium III Coppermine 1ghz $469 AMD Athlon Thunderbird 1.1 ghz $350 Intel Pentium III Coppermine 1.1 ghz RECALLED Intel Pentium IV Willamette 1.5ghz $1139 (If you can get ahold of one) What makes Intel CPUs worth twice as much money, the inferior performace ? :) Sorry this got off on an AMD vs Intel Jihad, but I truly can't take any of Intel's upcoming offerings, even the Itainium, seriously. It's time for IT Managers to stop buying Intel CPUs rather than AMDs because of the brand name and the "stability". People with old memories of K6/K6-2 cpus, can't seem to wake up to the fact that Intel cpus are the ones having the heat and stability issues. I won't even go into the rambus fiasco. If you happen to work under an Intel Only IT Manager, you know what I'm talking about. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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