I'd rather have 4 cores at 5GHz. Presumably there is no market.
I would, too. But Merc is right; physics and all that. Hell, I would love a single 10GHz CPU.
IBM's Power 7 processor operates at 4.14GHz. Is that close enough?
Until we're able to commercially produce light-based CPUs ~3.5 to 4 GHz is about as fast as we're going to be able to go. There are inherent limits on clock speed due to things like trace capacitance/inductance. You really can't economically get around these limits. This is why we started adding cores in the first place instead of increasing clock speeds. CPUs based on light will have none of these limitations, but they're decades away.
Until we're able to commercially produce light-based CPUs ~3.5 to 4 GHz is about as fast as we're going to be able to go. There are inherent limits on clock speed due to things like trace capacitance/inductance. You really can't economically get around these limits. This is why we started adding cores in the first place instead of increasing clock speeds. CPUs based on light will have none of these limitations, but they're decades away.
http://tinyurl.com/yermngwDoes anyone know how to pronounce Mangy-Cours?
The "s" is silent. Mahn-yee-coor is about as close as an english-speaking person can pronounce it right. If you trully want to ear it, I can try to find a microphone and send you the wave file. There's a French F1 race track that has that name too.Mahn-yee Coors?
They aren't French, they are based in Sunnyvale, CA.
Everybody is using place names as dev names so they can't be copyrighted.
The name of a place (a city, river, mountain range) can't be copyrighted, so they use them as dev names to save money on legal filings.
The name of a place (a city, river, mountain range) can't be copyrighted, so they use them as dev names to save money on legal filings.
You'd be surprised to learn that Intel is based in Oregon.For some reason I never realized that AMD was French. I assumed that they were a US or Taiwanese company.
You'd be surprised to learn that Intel is based in Oregon.
They haven't really written much since 2000, have they;-)
David: You REALLY need to get into water cooling...
Water cooling is certainly a better option when dealing with cards in the power range of the 5970. Let's you take that heat plus the CPU(s) and disperse it into a radiator cooled with slow running 120mm or larger fans. Benefits are far lower noise levels and higher overclocking headroom. Downside is additional cost of cooling system plus extra for waterblocked video cards, and possible total burnout if one of those couplings isn't secure. GFCI outlets would be good. I believe some of the latest water cooling kits have enough intelligence to shutdown the PC if it senses an overtemp situation.
BECAUSE IT'S NOT TRUE.Why is that surprising?
BECAUSE IT'S NOT TRUE.
On the other hand, Microsoft really is a ski lodge in the Canadian Rockies.
Intel DID have a facility in Oregon where the Willamette (P4) was designed. I know because my cousin worked for them there. He left them in 2001 or 2002, and I don't know if they still have that facility.BECAUSE IT'S NOT TRUE.
On the other hand, Microsoft really is a ski lodge in the Canadian Rockies.
Nonetheless, their headquarters are still in Santa Clara. Unlike the Microsoft ski lodge in British Columbia, I've been there.Intel DID have a facility in Oregon