Looking Ahead, the Conroe Comparison

Intel was well aware of what it was doing when it showed off Conroe at IDF, and it knew that there's no way that we could recommend the Pentium Extreme Edition 965 when Conroe was a little over a quarter away. If you need more of a reminder of why it will only help to wait, here are a few of the Conroe tests that we were able to run at IDF, which we duplicated on our systems here (same test configuration, test files and hardware):

MP3 Encoding with iTunes 6.0.1.3 - Intel Benchmark

DivX 6.1.1 Pro with Xmpeg 5.0.3 - Intel Benchmark

Windows Media Encoder 9 - Advanced Profile

Let's also not forget that the Conroe E6700 will list for $530, and there will eventually be an Extreme Edition based on it as well that will offer even better performance than what we're seeing here. In other words, as difficult as it usually is to recommend any of the FX or Extreme Edition series, it's virtually impossible to do so when you think of what's coming.

But if you absolutely must spend $1000+ on a CPU today, what should you do? While the 965 has become a lot more competitive with the FX-60, our overall nod still goes to AMD. The 965 does have its strengths in 3dsmax and video encoding, so if those are areas in which you are partcularly looking for stellar performance, then the recommendation obviously swings to Intel.

With AMD's Socket-AM2 right around the corner, and Conroe not too far away, we honestly can't recommend anything but a low cost CPU today to avoid virtually immediate obsolescence. And we'll be telling you exactly what low cost CPU that would be sometime next week...

Gaming Performance using F.E.A.R.
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  • AnandThenMan - Thursday, March 23, 2006 - link

    "Would you have preferred we not have this review at all?"

    What are you suggesting? That the review can't be published unless Conroe benches are in there as well? Let's be very clear here. Anandtech is publishing Intel sanctioned benches as the gospel truth. Anandtech is publishing benchmarks on an un-released product, running on unknown hardware, unknown settings, under restricted testing conditions, and passing them off without question at all.

    If this is the way Anandtech plans to do all articles from now on, then I want to see benches that include future products from ATI, NVIDIA, and others as much as possible. And it won't matter if ATI or NVIDIA supplies the hardware, doesn't allow anyone to see it, and puts restrictions on what benches can be run and for how long. Anandtech will STILL publish these benches and assure us all they are 100% accurate.

    It is very, very dissapointed to see Anandtech pull this crap. Conroe could very well live up the the hype and more. That is not the point. Integrity of testings means you control the testing environment, you control the hardware, and you control the software. And if you DON'T, then you SPECULATE and make it very clear that the results are speculation. You don't announce, "Intel takes back the performance crown" based on tests Intel let you perform. Very poor job.
  • AnnonymousCoward - Friday, March 24, 2006 - link

    You're overreacting. Any reader knows that the original Conroe tests couldn't be 100% verified, since Anand made that very clear. So then you read this review, and you keep that in mind. Big whoop.

    Thanks, Anand, for showing the Conroe numbers. It's information that any sane builder would want to see, even though the numbers haven't been independently confirmed.
  • PrinceGaz - Thursday, March 23, 2006 - link

    "If this is the way Anandtech plans to do all articles from now on, then I want to see benches that include future products from ATI, NVIDIA, and others as much as possible. And it won't matter if ATI or NVIDIA supplies the hardware, doesn't allow anyone to see it, and puts restrictions on what benches can be run and for how long. Anandtech will STILL publish these benches and assure us all they are 100% accurate."

    It would be a bit pointless for the companies to supply the hardware, but not allow anyone to see it and put restrictions on the benchmarks run. It would be far more sensible if the companies simply ran the benchmarks on future products themselves, and provided Anand with the figures to publish :)
  • Zebo - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    Anand is doing intel's dirty work. It's called osborne effect - leak an upcoming products when you have nothing to undercut competitors sales. Brillaint move by intel - and Anand is being played like fiddle.
  • Zebo - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    How do you know there was'nt a 3.6 Ghz conroe in there?
  • cornfedone - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    SOS, DD.

    They ain't got a clue.
  • ksherman - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    not sure if it is real or not, but it goes down in my bookas one sweet word: "obsolescence" (found in the closing paragraph)
  • Chadder007 - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    Who in their right mind would purchase this processor??? ....on yeah, the one that buys the new $10,000 Dell. :kekekeke:
  • jojo4u - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    EIST was introduced in the 6xx series and not in the 5xxJ as the article suggests.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Wednesday, March 22, 2006 - link

    You are correct, I've made the appropriate change to the article :)

    Take care,
    Anand

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