Let's begin with AMD's line-up, here we will talk about what has
been annouced and what is released yet. We will not talk about the availability.
AMD announced seven models of its new born Bulldozer FX CPU, four of them have
already hit the market. Two of them are eight-core CPUs, one's a six-core
processor and finally
anotherone is a quad-core model. These AM3+ processors are also compatible with AM3 motherboards.
However you will have to check the website of your motherboard manufacturer to
update to latest BIOS version and check if there is a version that supports the
new FX processors.
Looking at
the specifications, they have a TDP of 95 Watts and 125 Watts for the most
powerful of them. They also have a L2 cache that is proportional to the amount
of cores and 8 MB of L3 cache. All those FX processors are ''Black Editions'',
which means that the CPU multiplyer is unlocked. Furthermore all CPUs have a
Turbo feature. The first step, which is called Turbo Core does affect all the
CPUs cores while the
second step only affects half of total amount of cores, which has the
consequence that the dissipation power remains withing the TDP limit.
At the time this article has been written four models have been available and prices are starting at CHF 120.- (est. EUR 100.-). They go up to a still modest CHF 254.- (est. EUR 212.-) for the high-end FX-8150.
AMD started from scratch to make this new architecture way
different from what we used to see on a Phenom II for exemple. The major change
is the sharing of computing units. By computing units we mean the fetching unit
as well as the decoding unit, the Floating Point Scheduler and finally the L2
cache. The image above shows you a dual core CPU while the image below
shows you how a Bulldozer's module (2 physical cores) is organized.
Theorically
this lowers the CPUs manufacturing cost by lowering the amount of transistors this
should also
result in lower power consumption and still maintaining maximum performance. In
practice it's another world. The FX Bulldozer's architecture is performing very
well for multithreaded applications and for optimized software as well as server and
supercomputers. Unfortunately you and me we're no professional users, we're
consumers and this is a entirely different target market. We do not tailor the
software to our needs. We have software the is how it is and for us a CPU should
perform best with the software we have. But we'll focus on that in the
performance part of this review. To stay plain and simple, this architecture can be seen like
Intel's Hyperthreading but better. Better because hyperthreading is based on
one physical and one logical core. Bulldozer on the other hand offers two
physical cores which offer an 80 percent scaling. Could it be seen as a quadcore
CPU with "HyperThreading" ? No, although it's not a "real" octacore processor as well.
We like to say it's a processor with four modules.
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