Intel Xeon, AMD Opteron

It looks like it’s finally time for the Opteron 252 to start playing ball in the retail vendor market. We first saw performance of the Opteron 252 and the famous E4 stepping a little over a month ago, and since then, we haven’t been able to keep up with the number of requests from readers and parse engines looking for the product. $800 for the Opteron 252 [RTPE: OSA252FAA5BL] sounds a little bit too much for us to spend on a server processor, but considering the fact that no other Opterons support the SSE3 instruction set or the 90nm production process, the cost may be justified for some forward-looking IT managers.



Intel’s response to the Opteron x52 launch was less publicized; the Iriwindale ( Prescott 2M for servers) launch came and went without much fan fare. The Intel enterprise lineup works opposite to that of AMD’s; Intel’s server platforms are usually the slowest to update to new technologies.



Given that the larger cache size on Iriwindale probably comes in handy for database applications where large L3 caches are vogue, Xeon CPUs with much larger L2 cache could prove a very exciting step forward for Intel’s x86 enterprise lineup as a whole.

AMD Athlon 64
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  • Possessed Freak - Wednesday, March 30, 2005 - link

    What is with the DOS based looking graphs?
  • jlanter1 - Tuesday, March 29, 2005 - link

    Does anyone know how much longer the Socket 462 Athlon XP mobile chips will be available? I know it won't be available forever. The amd cpu roadmap isn't clear about when this chip will be retired.

    Jared
  • Avalon - Monday, March 28, 2005 - link

    Kris, your pricing engine lists the s754 Sempron 2600+ and 3000+ with a 256KB L2 cache option. There is no such chip. The 2600+ and 3000+ models only come in 128KB L2 cache. Look at the model number and see for yourself. Also, under your AXP Mobile pricing list, you don't show the 35w mobiles, which are just as plentiful and often a good alternative to the 45w ones. Just to let you know.
  • KristopherKubicki - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    PrinceGaz: I wouldn't put a lot of money on the chips only taking a week to get to retail :)

    Kristopher
  • PrinceGaz - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    It's worth noting that the long awaited Venice (E4 revision) A64 S939 3000+, 3200+, 3500+, and 3800+ parts will replace the current Winchester and Newcastle (3800+) processors on April 4. It will take them a week or two to get into retail, but they should be seriously overclockable, better than the current Winchesters.

    On April 15, the 4000+ is transitioned from ClawHammer to San Diego (E3 revision), which is likely to be the cheapest 1MB cache version.

    I've no idea what is happening with the A64 FX-55 or much rumored FX-57, but I suspect AMD could release a San Diego at 2.8 GHz if they wished, and rename the FX-55 as a 4200+ or 4300+.

    The chip to get will have to be one of those mid-range Venice cores, as coupled with a good overclockable mobo you should be able to take it up to at least 2.7-2.8GHz if AMD/IBM have got the SoI plus strained-silicon fabrication working well. A Pentium 4 (or Pentium 5xx/6xx if they abandon the P4 name) just isn't worth considering when the A64 is so competitive.
  • stephenbrooks - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    On the last page I see:

    Intel Xeon 3.2GHz 533FSB 512KB ZipZoomFly 690.00 0.00 690.00
    Intel Xeon 3.2GHz 800FSB 1MB AllStarShop 348.95 7.95 356.90

    ...so I guess nobody's going to be buying the 512KB model then.
  • KristopherKubicki - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    bupkus: We only plan on moving the front end so that the entire AnandTech site is uniform. The backend and bot will remain Perl/PHP/MySQL.

    Kristopher
  • semo - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    why does the price of the athlon 64 3000 939 (winchester) not fall here in the uk. there have been virtually no price drops since it was launched
  • justly - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    It might be nice if the Anandtech search engine could differentiate between OEM and retail.

    I thought I had seen the Sempron 2600+ on Newegg cheaper than the one listed for Monarch so I checked. Newegg had the retail version for $77.99 (free shipping) while Monarch had the OEM for $78.00 (not sure but I think it also had free shipping).

    This just shows that prices can change quickly, and you should allways compare the item and price for yourself.
  • mongoosesRawesome - Sunday, March 27, 2005 - link

    "This week, the talk of the town seems to be ASUS’s clever little Socket 479 to Socket 478 adaptor, which enables any mild budget 865PE and 875P motherboard to compete with the high end 885GME motherboard solutions from DFI [RTPE: DFI 855GME 855GME-MGF] and AOpen [RTPE: AOpen 855GME i855GMEm-LFS]."

    As yet, only a few Asus motherboards are supported - not "any mild budget 865PE and 875P motherboard."

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