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To: AK2004 who wrote (160532)2/27/2002 4:06:23 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Albert, you are still coming up with strawman arguments.

Please show me an actual quote or link.

Tenchusatsu



To: AK2004 who wrote (160532)2/27/2002 4:08:09 PM
From: wanna_bmw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
albert, Re: "I just read on bloomberg about performance increase of 30% (intel sources). You are not going to tell me that that is not misleading after devoting so much to amd's model number misrepresentation and how some may actually think that it is frequency. Some may actually think that it is uniform 30% across all applications"

At least Intel isn't renaming their 2.0GHz Xeon processor a Xeon 2600+. That would be the QuantiSpeed equivalent of claiming a 30% improvement due to Hyperthreading.

wbmw



To: AK2004 who wrote (160532)2/27/2002 9:52:17 PM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Hyperthreading Xeon CPUs

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The performance advantages of hyperthreading are undeniable. Our tests of a hyperthreading-enabled Intel Xeon DP server showed, on average, a 45.71 percent increase in SQL transaction performance and a 31.13 percent increase in three-tier Web application performance, versus the same system with hyperthreading disabled.


infoworld.com