Sempron

AMD's budget Socket 754 processor continues to chug along offering excellent performance for a slight price premium. This week we saw the full lineup of 64-bit enabled Semprons show up at vendors, without much fluctuation in pricing yet. As always, if you're looking to spring for a "high end" 3300+ or 3400+ Sempron we strongly suggest taking a look at a Socket 939 offering instead. The bump in performance the larger L2 cache provides is well worth the few extra dollars, and Socket 939 socket has a little bit longer life expectancy on AMD's roadmaps.

The Turion has finally started showing up in several retail channels. AMD's latest mobile offering vows to battle Intel's Dothan mobile platform and does so formidably. Not much information is available on what desktop motherboards will run the Turions so keep a close eye on our CPU forum for the latest developments.

The Athlon 64 Mobility is still available at a few vendors for those looking for an overclocking thrill. Vendors tell us stock on these chips is very low, but whether or not that means we will see market changes in price and availability is still up in the air; Athlon 64 Mobility and DTR sales have been extremely low to begin with.

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  • ElFenix - Monday, September 5, 2005 - link

    these PR numbers don't tell me anything =(
  • andrewln - Tuesday, September 6, 2005 - link

    mhz does not mean anything too
  • ElFenix - Sunday, September 11, 2005 - link

    mhz is very useful for comparing between the same families of processors.

    ideally they're be model/pr number, core mhz, bus mhz, and l2 cache size in these tables, i think.
  • joex444 - Tuesday, September 6, 2005 - link

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_AMD_Athlon_64..."> has a list of all the Athlon 64s, and below it has links to other types of CPUs where you can get a list like the one above from the link in See Also.

    For the "fun" of it, I decided to transform the list into a database. It's really interesting how many, for example, 3200+ CPUs there are, across sockets and cores. It's on my home PC, so I can't even find the best example for you, but I can see how you could be confused. I should do the same for Intel's, I think there's is more confusing. For example, a 520 and 518 differ in FSB speed -- the 520 has a 800MHz / 518 has 533MHz. It's a big difference but is only worth 2 points (assuming the 518 runs slower than the 520; if the 533MHz bus chip runs faster than a 520 but slower than 530 then it's a 522, if that exists, it's all theoretical since I'm not looking).
  • ceefka - Monday, September 5, 2005 - link

    Would these boards require a 939 Opteron or do they also play with Venice, Toledo or Machester (X2)?
  • ceefka - Monday, September 5, 2005 - link

    It took me a while, but I have found the answer myself.

    From what I have seen from the Tyan Tomcat K8E S2865 it will play with 939 Opterons as well as any s939 CPU, though it doesn't feature the nF4 Pro.

    Foxconn makes their NFPIK8AA-8EKRS for s940 CPUs NVIDIA nForce Pro 2200 + nForce Pro 2050 and nicy nice TI firewire controllers a+b. If they can swap the 2050 for a couple of PCI slots on a s939 version, that would be a nice board.
  • Tides - Sunday, September 4, 2005 - link

    Is there really any gain from single cores atm? When will we see apps/games/programs take advantage of this.
  • yacoub - Tuesday, September 6, 2005 - link

    What you do is buy a socket-939 system now and a single core chip since they're pretty cheap these days. Then in maybe 6-12 months, pick up a dual-core chip when those prices have fallen a bunch so you're set for games that might finally arrivee that take advantage of the second core somehow.
  • highlandsun - Sunday, September 4, 2005 - link

    I just replaced the Winchester 3000+ in my system with an X2 3800+. My compile times have sped up drastically. On the 3000+ compiling my source tree took about 4 minutes. With the 3800+ and serial make, it's 3:22 and the system shows 50% idle time. With parallel make -j2 it takes 1:50 and the system shows about 15% idle time. With -j3 it takes 1:45 and about 1% idle time. I'm pleased.
  • xsilver - Monday, September 5, 2005 - link

    man those compile times are great but for noobs that are new to computers and only use it for surfing and games --- I think its still not really recommended that they get dual core

    a good analogy i can think of is turbocharging in cars -- too often i see people with twin turbocharger cars that dont even rev their engines beyond the 3000rpm limit for the turbo's to kick in. What a waste!!! and how stupid (eg. always driving around with turbo lag)

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