Yonah hot n hungry?
According to this Register article Yonah will either be G4 speed and low power or fast and too hungry for a laptop. With the 2.1GHz unit being around 49W it won't be running a Powerbook anytime soon.
That low voltage G5 looks quite good now
That low voltage G5 looks quite good now

Comments
Originally posted by Blackcat
According to this Register article Yonah will either be G4 speed and low power or fast and too hungry for a laptop. With the 2.1GHz unit being around 49W it won't be running a Powerbook anytime soon.
That low voltage G5 looks quite good now
The Register...lol.
Originally posted by kim kap sol
The Register...lol.
Ah, the geek equivalent of "LA LA LA I CAN'T HEAR YOU!".
El Reg is not making this up, they are printing Intel news, albeit via PCWatch.
Yonah looks less wonderful to me.
someone with knowledge in this field come and blast these statements!!!
Originally posted by Elixir
it better not be g4 speed.
someone with knowledge in this field come and blast these statements!!!
Actually, it is in accordance with TS predictions for an Intel iBook at first. A low power Yonah would prevent the new iBooks from entering the Powerbook territory, performance wise. Of course Apple could use older P-Ms.
Originally posted by Elixir
it better not be g4 speed.
someone with knowledge in this field come and blast these statements!!!
I'd love to have G4 speed. If you take today's G4. Make it dual core and add in a fast FSB you have a killer laptop chip. Clock for clock Yonah won't be much faster than a G4 but when you add in larger L2 cache and faster FSB it takes the lead.
49 watts by itself means nothing. It depends on where the hotspots on the chip are I think you'd find that a even a 970fx will rise in heat depending on its use. It's obvious though with dual cores that laptop cooling is going to have to take precedence over the desire for ridiculously thin laptops
G4 speed my foot. At 1.5 Ghz (which is used on the really low power systems) its faster than all G4s.
G4 speed my foot. At 1.5 Ghz (which is used on the really low power systems) its faster than all G4s
A Pentium M is at best equal to a G4 sans taking into account the FSB. I doubt that a 1.5Ghz Yonah single core is going to be much of a attraction to people that need the advantages of a Powerbook.
If so, this is comparable to the 15-24W quoted for 1.67 mhz L2400 package. So we're trading altivec for the faster FSB and larger cache. The real question is how Yonah and G4 compare at same chip speed. Does anyone have empirical data therein?
Apple on Intel "get use to disappointment"
Anyone still clinging to the Jobs fantasy that Intel was some sort of 'choice'?
Heh.
£749 PC - Dual core, Digital TV etc etc etc
What a great spec for a low low price - if only we got all that on the G5
LOL...funny. We're finally getting aways from sub 2100Mhz busses and slow clock speeds and you have people smirking about the Intel choice.
What a great spec for a low low price - if only we got all that on the G5
That's kind of interesting but I'm not envious of boxen from unknown companies. I like the drive bay on top of the case.
I will be more interested to know the powerconsumption of the yonah while running a DVD, writing a word document, CPU intensive tasks ...
That's said, a merom will be way more impressive in those aera.
Originally posted by Splinemodel
We're probably not going to see anything really impressive from Intel until they start finding ways to work Itanium into their consumer offerings.
Itanic? Please no.
Originally posted by Blackcat
Itanic? Please no.
I don't really want to get started with this, but from a theoretical/academic standpoint, Itanium[2] is very elegant and practical. It's just that we've seen that it takes a while for theory to trickle down until it's at the commodity stage, and that's what's happenning with Itanium. But it will happen, and the game industry looks like it will be leading the charge.
One thing is for certain though: stick a fork in superscalar CPUs . . . they're done. If it weren't for a little thing called "installed base" they'd be gone already.
It will have an "E" part for presumably "Extreme" TDP versions of Yonah which will have >= 40 Watt TDP and >2.2 GHz. These are likely Sossamans (will have dual-CPU support (quad-core) in companion northbridge) and Yonah CPUs for 2" thick gaming laptops. A 2.4 GHz Yonah will generally be equivalent to a 2.4 GHz Athlon X2 or 2.4 GHz 970mp in performance. It will be faster in some things, but slower in others.
The "T" part is the normal voltage, highest volume Yonah part with 29 to 49 Watts TDP and up to 2.16 GHz. Apple can skim the 2 GHz 31 Watt TDP "T" parts if they are good at negotiating.
The "L" part is the official low voltage, somewhat lower volume Yonah part with 15 to 24 Watts TDP and up to 1.66 GHz.
The "U" part is the official ultra low voltage, lowest volume Yonah part with <14 Watts TDP and up to 1.3 GHz, but probably somewhere around 1.1 GHz.
There will likely be single core variants of all of these parts.
Intel TDP != AMD TDP != IBM max power != Freescale max power. The companies run an instruction mix through the CPU that they believe would produce the most power, that they believe is above any one user would put a processor through. They are not the same instruction mix, but for intents and purposes, all of the TDP or max power numbers should be the maximum power 99% of users would put a processor through. There really is no use arguing true Intel max power will be higher than IBM max power.
A 1.8 GHz dual-core Yonah will be able to run 1080p H.264 video at 30 fps. That's the power of a 1.8 or 2 GHz dual processor Power Mac G5 in a laptop. On top of that, it will literally feel faster and be faster for most of the apps (integer apps) a consumer user would use than a comparably clocked G5 machine or 8641D machine.
People keep on harping that there are low power G5 processors. Yes, there are, but look at the clock rate of those low power G5 processors. 1.6 GHz at 21 Watts maximum and 2 GHz at 50 Watts maximum for "power-optimized" parts. No power-optimized 1.8 GHz part given. The standard 1.8 GHz part is 37 Watts maximum.
Yonah will deliver similar clock rates and power consumption, but it has twice the cores and hence about twice the integer performance. The G5 will only be faster at single threaded FMADD heavy FPU and specific AltiVec unique problems.
For the Freescale 8641D, my estimate would be: typical power consumption for 1.4 GHz 7448 is about 10 Watts x 2 for maximum power consumption x 1.5 for dual-core = 30 Watts max power consumption for a 1.4 GHz 8641D. A 1.67 GHz 8641D will be in the neighborhood of 35 to 40 Watts. Lookee, Intel Yonah will be 24 Watts TDP at 1.67 GHz, almost half the power consumption.
You scale linearly for increased clock rate and quadradically for voltage increases necessary to get the higher clock rates. It can very easily be more than 80 Watts at 2 GHz. The only problem is that it won't be delivered until late 1H 06 or 2H 06. Still waiting on 7448 G4 upgrades to confirm that they are shipping the chip. It's not good sign that we haven't seen any yet.
By 2H 2006, Intel will have Merom out.
what should i wait for?
my activities usually run as so
powerpoint/keynote/word/excel
heavy internet browsing
Reason or any equivalent musical
program
and an occasional photoshop