AES-NI

Westmere does add some new instructions to x86, although the big expansion comes with AVX and Sandy Bridge next year. Westmere gets six new encryption/decryption instructions. The group of instructions accelerate AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) and are thus referred to as AES-NI.

All the new instructions need is software support and you'll see acceleration on Westmere. There were Winzip demos aplenty, which will have full acceleration support when the first Westmere chips hit.

When accelerated, Intel believes there will be no performance hit for encryption/decryption and it had the demos to back it up.

Here we're looking at disk throughput of an Intel SSD with full disk encryption enabled. Without AES-NI the performance takes a real hit:


40MB/s reads, 20 - 30MB/s writes

But with it, you can hardly tell you're even running AES:


~150MB/s reads, 50MB/s+ writes

Intel expects that full disk encryption and improved security will be commonplace once Westmere is in the mainstream.

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  • shortark - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    "The problem is that when we go to buy a pc all we see is a processor name--i7 , i5, blah blah"

    No offense meant, but since I found Anandtech, I have never had to "go to buy a pc".

    All the info you need in order to build your own pc, to whatever specifications is all right here. Anandtech has "roudups" for different budget levels to help clear things up.

    It is sort of funny though, because I found the site originally after getting caught not knowing the difference between a "williamette", and a "northwood" when I tried to upgrade my own motherboard.

    Since then I've overclocked the snot out of every chip I've bought.
  • mdbusa - Friday, September 25, 2009 - link

    Going to buy a pc for me means going to the it mall to a pc shop and choosing the mb cpu etc... and then the shop will put it together for me. and yes I agree that Anandtech has great advice on budget and other systems. the pc shops have pricelists of cpu's mb etc..--nowhere will those lists include terms like clarksdale or westmere or whatever--the wont even mention nm size.
    just choose your mb, cpu, video, ram etc...
  • shortark - Friday, September 25, 2009 - link

    With a little patience you could build your own, with more power, better warranties, and best of all lower price. And to help, sites like Newegg, or Tigerdirect use the codenames in most of their product listings, and newegg can seperate by socket type. You sould give it a try it's fairly simple since SATA, you don't have to worry about hdd jumpers anymore, so it's pretty much just matching up similar connections. The real value though is in overclocking. ie 2.4 P4 @3.2, or 2.4 E6600@ 3.3, or a 2.4 Q6600 @ 3.6, or my newest 3.0 E8400 @ 3.6 it's free performance, and that is whats got me so excited about each die shrink. Every time the die gets smaller, the easy overclocking potential goes up.
    I'm looking forward to redoing and shrinking my HTPC, since my rig now is a full blown 680i Q6600 system, Not exactly efficient or quiet. sorry for the rant.
  • taltamir - Friday, September 25, 2009 - link

    except, the article focuses on the laptop cpu... which, last I checked, you can't really build yourself.
  • shortark - Friday, September 25, 2009 - link

    Evidentally you missed page 1. blah blah blah" Intel Clarkdale Desktop Processors"....."socket LGA 1156"...or maybe it was the title you missed."The Real Conroe Successor: Clarkdale & All You Need to Know about Westmere", or maybe it was in page 1 where a simple table states "Clarkdale | Desktop | 2 | 32nm"

    beside my response was agreeing that the code names are confusing.
  • Electrician Conroe - Monday, July 23, 2012 - link

    That's amazing, but good news because it will give AMD a great opportunity to recover. They can sell a quad against any Intel dual as long as the base clocks have the same first digit. Nobody (statistically) is going figure that even a double-throwdown super-trick over-and-under hyperthreaded handshaking pair will beat four of a kind, across the board. It might be true, but it won't sell at Best Buy.

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