I just saw the benchmarks for the AM2, and i must say im very disappointed.
These results were expected based on the last set of tests, at least AM2 chips are edging slightly ahead now.
That really sucks, i thought the AM2 where going to be crazy good. "IT feels like someone has just deflated my heart"
If you were pinning your hope of AM2 chips then you really didn't have any clue what they were. We all knew that bandwidth wasn't an issue for k8+ chips, and knew that the switch to ddr2 would hold nothing for amd other than a marketing plus.
Looks like I'll be tilting towards Conroe then.
sigh, Conroe = chip AM2 = socket, would love to see you run a rig on a socket alone.
As some of us have been saying before, AM2 is basically the same thing as the current X2, except it has a new memory controller that allows DDR2.
The memory controlled is on the cpu, if has nothing to do with the socket type, AM2 does not have a memory controller the X2 cpus on the AM2 do have a memory controller and it is the latter that support ddr2
And the main reason why it performs better in games (slightly), is because of the faster RAM, if it was the same speed there probably wouldnt be any difference.
Again bandwidth is not an issue for the amd k8+, optimisation is mainly the reason for the slight improvement
ooo, groovy cool... me want conroe...
I sence a new fanboy in the making
conroe is a PROCESSOR, am2 is a SOCKET TYPE.
thank god someone sees sence
wait for new chip architectures in 2007. until then, the conroe (if released on schedule) will rule the remainder of the year. thank you, good day.
Amd have nothing in the pipeline, there roadmap shows no new architecture. And in this day and age you really cant keep these things quite, nor do you want to (amd have always played a more open hand than intel)
With that, it has a shorter instruction lengths vs. Intels motherboard memory controllers.
just that right mix of technical terms and bullcrap to get past most users. But not all

Should have left it at your memory controller comment which was all that was needed to be said.
AMD chips are for lack of a better term, quicker because of the shorter pipes and less stages.
The short pipeline may result in more performance, but at a slower rate. Also note that not all intel chips runs at insane pipeline lengths
cpu 101 said:
Pipeline
Much like an assembly line, processors breakdown the execution of an instructions into stages:
* The more stages available, the simpler each stage becomes and the faster each stage executes. The downside is however, if nearing the end of the 'assembly line' something "wrong" happens, the entire thing has to start over (thus the processor becomes heavily dependent on predictors and optimizations to prevent this from happening). Also, the more stages available, the faster the overall clockspeed can be.
* For a processor with few[er] stages in the pipeline, the processor is far more efficient and is able to complete the same amount of work with fewer clock cycles and also the other side of the worst-case pipeline-scenario: if something "wrong" happens near the end of the pipeline, fewer stages need to be re-traversed. The only downside is that net clockspeed is limited (because with fewer individual stages, each stage is more complex than the longer-pipeline variant and you can only rush it so fast)
As far as AM2 performance goes, right now it doesn't look great but, what this will allow AMD to do is, take their processors up in Ghz which will allow them to utilize the higher speed RAM and that's when we will see gains made from the AM2 platform.
AMD's current choice of architecture limits there ceiling clock speed
i would assume that amd's switch to the higher bandwidth of ddr2, and the fact that just the upper echelon of current cpu's will be transitioned to the new socket (in addition to a couple new cpu's at the launch, though probably nothing special), means that something must be a brewin'.
dont count on it, we will be looking at moving into socket-f on amd rigs before i expect to see anything of note from AMD camp. We have the new 65nm cores to come out this year, and AMD will probably be looking to move into the more mobile market with these cores, after all thats the real growth area at the moment