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Old 30th Sep 02, 01:07 PM
ecperez ecperez is offline
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Advanced Micro Devices Inc. will roll out its fastest processors yet, the Athlon XP 2800+ and 2700+, during a news conference on Tuesday, according to sources close to the company.
The new chips, in addition to running at higher frequencies than the current top-of-the-line 2600+, will feature a 333MHz front side bus, which should enable the 2800+ to perform about 10 percent faster than the 2600+ with its 266MHz front side bus.

AMD, of Sunnyvale, Calif., moved up the launch date from mid-October, sources said, to give it "breathing room" to promote its chips before rival Intel Corp. releases its 3GHz Pentium 4 late next month, as well as to assure that computer makers feature the chips in their high-end PCs during holiday promotions.

However, the fourth-quarter outlook for both chip makers, who have continued to suffer from sluggish sales, is not very bright right now, said market analyst Jonathan Joseph of Salomon Smith Barney in San Francisco.

"We expect some seasonal uptick, but it's not going to be as strong a pickup in sales as we've traditionally seen during the holiday season," Joseph said.

AMD declined to comment on whether it will announce the two chips next week, but the company has confirmed that it has scheduled a news conference Tuesday that will be broadcast over the Web. The link will be posted on AMD's site next week.

AMD will also tout its True Performance Initiative during the Webcast, a program it launched in October 2001 that aims to promote the use of benchmarks rather than processor frequencies to compare its chips to other products, specifically Intel's Pentium 4. Currently, the fastest Pentium 4 running at 2.8GHz operates about 700MHz faster than the 2.1GHz Athlon XP 2600+, but that frequency gap is misleading, AMD and industry analysts have said.

Overall, Pentium 4 chips process less amount of data per clock cycle than Athlon XP processors, a difference that arose when Intel switched from the Pentium III to Pentium 4 design. But while there's widespread agreement that AMD's design does more work per clock cycle, how much effect that has on performance remains debatable.

Source: eweek.com



Last edited by ecperez at Sep 30 2002, 08:08 PM
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