Final Words

Both Intel's 955X and NVIDIA's nForce4 SLI Intel Edition chipsets are expected to be available in motherboards by the end of this month. With that being said, which platform do you go for?  Both contenders are quite strong. NVIDIA has the benefits of out-of-the-box SLI support, support for more PATA devices and better NCQ performance than Intel's 955X.  On the other hand, Intel has HD Audio support, official support for TM2 on dual core processors and performance that's just as good as NVIDIA in most cases, at a lower price.

We'd give the edge to NVIDIA because of their strong NCQ performance and support for SLI, but those two items aren't necessarily on everyone's shopping list.  For a lot of people, SLI is too big of an investment and a lower priced motherboard is far more desirable, not to mention support for TM2 on dual core CPUs for a cooler, quieter system. 

The fact that this decision is so very hard is a testament to NVIDIA's strength as a chipset manufacturer. In fact, we've never seen anyone threaten Intel with nearly identical specifications, nearly as much as NVIDIA has with their nForce4 SLI Intel Edition. 

In the end, the decision will undoubtedly come down to shipping motherboards - and whether or not motherboard manufacturers are able to enable TM2 support on their nForce4 boards.  If they are able to, then we'd have no problem giving NVIDIA the clear win here. Their performance is competitive and they have strengths that exceed those of Intel. 

Intel's CPU team should be happy. They have found an extremely complementary partner in NVIDIA.  However, Intel's chipset team has reason to worry; motherboard manufacturers weren't happy with the 925/915 chipsets, and with a viable alternative in NVIDIA, we may very well have an opportunity for NVIDIA to start eating into Intel's own chipset market share in a way that no other company has in the past. 

Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory SLI Performance
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  • segagenesis - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #15 - Score: -1, Troll

    Why are you here then? Hell, you cant even read I guess. I gave you a link talking about heat output when you said it was "opinion" when it was stated Intel runs hotter. I can tell you that from fact from the 25 prescotts sitting in a lab here and when they are all running the A/C better be running too!

    Why dont you come up with some facts yourself instead of insulting both the site and others?
  • Questar - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #11,
    What makes you think I would care about "a huge landslide of flames regarding your post in this comment section"?

    99% of the people on this site are ignorant cattle without the ability to think for themselves. They are here as part of a communal circle jerk over AMD cpu's. I care as much for their thoughts as I care about the thoughts of the cow that gets slaughtered for my dinner.
  • jimmy43 - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    I see we got an Intel fanboy posting in the forums :]
  • Questar - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #10,
    I see no information in your link that #8's argument. He specifically said that an A64 is faster than Intel in all applications except for video encoding. The link you provided actually proves him wrong, as there are other applications in which the comparable Intel CPU is faster, or the difference is insignificant between the two.
  • mlittl3 - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    Oops, sorry...correction

    "...release of the K8 architecture 8 years ago..." should read "...release of the K8 architecture 2 years ago..."

    Sorry about that. AMD's 2nd year anniversary of the release of the Opteron is next Thursday where they will introduct dual core Opterons to the public. Can't wait.
  • mlittl3 - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    Oh my God!!! Questar where have you been?

    Go read all the reviews of Intel and AMD processors since the release of the K8 architecture 8 years ago. You have a lot of reading to do.

    Don't give the editor-in-chief of a 8 million plus readership hardware review site advise about getting his facts straight. Anandtech receives and reviews hundreds and hundreds of hardware that you will never even dream of owning.

    If a statement is made in a review from a site as reputable as Anandtech, it is not made lightly. You have all the right in the world to question it and seek a second opinion elsewhere, but it is COMMON knowledge among those reading CPU reviews over the last two years that AMD CPUs are faster in games and computational number crunching whereas Intel excels in audio and video encoding PERIOD.

    You can easily explain these findings. Games and computational number crunching take low latency, high memory bandwidth to work well. Audio and video encoding need fast processor speeds.

    Wait about five hours after the release of this review and you will soon be finding a huge landslide of flames regarding your post in this comment section.

    Have fun! :)

    PS. You must not read at all if you think anyone has found a performance advantage of PCI-E and DDR2 over AGP and DDR for current software applications. Not tomshardware, Hardocp, Xbitlabs, Anandtech, etc. have found a performance increase between AGP 8X vs. PCI-E 16x or DDR400 vs. DDR2400/533/667.
  • segagenesis - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #9 - You havent been here long have you? Intel does have a performance advantage in encoding applications... but your claims of without proof to others?
    http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?...
    Umm yeah. Pay attention 007.

    And why even claim AGP has no performance benefits over PCI? Ever heard of a shared bus (PCI)?

    ?LOGIC ERROR
    READY.
  • Questar - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #8,
    Without proof, it's your opinion. So, find some reviews that showed an Intel cpu being significantly slower than an equivalent A64 in all applications except video encoding.

    I assume you are using an AGP video card. Why? It has no performance benefits over a PCI card. Or is FPS in a game the only way you measure perfomance?
  • n yusef - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    #5
    "Honestly, Intel processors and even the platform haven’t been interesting since the introduction of Prescott. They have been too hot and poor performers, not to mention that the latest Intel platforms forced a transition to technologies that basically offered no performance benefits (DDR2, PCI Express)."

    Your opinion only, don't make this out to be fact.

    That is pretty much fact. In all areas except encoding, they were worse performers than their competiton (Athlon 64). The extra heat sure didn't improve that either. As far as forcing DDR2 and PCI Express, when they didn't improve performance, you can't disagree with that.
  • radx - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - link

    Questar

    I'm happy you're not the one writing these reviews here at anandtech. :-)

    Go Anand!

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