|
-
Hammerhead Shark
Pentium III: The processor that would not die
Awhile back everyone was saying they were killing off the PIII; well I still see they are selling it at speeds up to 1.4 ghz. Recently they announced some new lower power pIII's for the server market also.
Seems to me that the PIII could easily take on the athlons if they just bumped up the speeds a few more notches and it's already at .13 process too which athlon still has yet to achieve. Not much bad is said about the PIII's(now the P4 is a another story; he he) either.
ASUS CUV4X-C
Win 98 SE
PIII 1000mhz/133
Sony 21" G500 monitor
2 sticks 256K pc133 cas 2
Radeon 8500 64mb 275/275 built by ati
Maxtor 7200 ata100 60 gig
Tuttle Beach Santa cruz soundcard
linksys wireless router/cable modem
floppy & Lite-on 163 DVD drive
Liteon 24/10/40 CDR
ANTEC 601 case
also: shuttle SN41G2 and Epox 8K5a systems
-
Gibson Les Paul Shark
Clock for Clock the PIII is nearly identical to a Tbird. A PIII @ 1.5Ghz would equal an 1800XP. It is a VERY good chip in itself, just intel wants to push the P4. Stupid idea in my head is that why cripple the PIII.......sell a crippled P4........make a semi-decent P4........cripple PIII even more. I consider the "Celeron" Tualatin a PIII since it is, with a 100 bus. I just wish Intel made the PIII stop around 1.7Ghz and then did the northwood. A 1.7Ghz PIII would equal a 2100XP. Pretty close anyway.
-
13662
Re: Pentium III: The processor that would not die
Originally posted by Belial
Awhile back everyone was saying they were killing off the PIII; well I still see they are selling it at speeds up to 1.4 ghz. Recently they announced some new lower power pIII's for the server market also.
Seems to me that the PIII could easily take on the athlons if they just bumped up the speeds a few more notches and it's already at .13 process too which athlon still has yet to achieve. Not much bad is said about the PIII's(now the P4 is a another story; he he) either.
I see your situation. I've got a diff vers of the same socket board as you with a maxed out PIII. I always thought they could ring them out a bit further.
-
Sleeps with the Fishes
Definitely...the new .13u process can take the P3 so much further. Many have OC'd their tualatins to over 1.6Ghz without extreme cooling. I don't see a reason why it wasn't pushed further since there was a hell of a lot of room to go with the core. Stupid intel makes a cripple P4 that denies consumers of higher clocked quality P3s.
-
The problem is that, back in the times when Intel released the first P4, P3 had hit a wall, it couldnt go past 1000Mhz mark. When the new Tualatin based P3/Celeron was ready to go, P4 was already an accepted CPU and it was the flagship thus intel had found itself in a very messed up situation. But P3 CANT beat a P4, it is bad for buissines.
Athlon T-bredB(JIUHB) 1700+ @2250Mhz(1.7V)
Gigabyte GA7-VAXP (VIA KT400)
HERCULES 3D PROPHET 9700
HERCULES 3D PROPHET III (collecting dust)
2*256 Samsung PC333@180Mhz
40 Gigs ATA100 Maxtor HDD
Flyvideo TV tuner, 56k PCI Motorola modem
Speeze 5R266B1H3 EagleStream cooler
Generic 300 PSU
17" AOC Spectrum 7Glr
-
Gibson Les Paul Shark
Originally posted by Cristian
But P3 CANT beat a P4, it is bad for buissines
I disagree.........I can match a 2Ghz P4........so......take a Tualatin to about 1.6, or 1.7Ghz and it will match a 2.2 to 2.4 P4.
-
Sleeps with the Fishes
Originally posted by RPG Junkie
Clock for Clock the PIII is nearly identical to a Tbird. A PIII @ 1.5Ghz would equal an 1800XP. It is a VERY good chip in itself, just intel wants to push the P4. Stupid idea in my head is that why cripple the PIII.......sell a crippled P4........make a semi-decent P4........cripple PIII even more. I consider the "Celeron" Tualatin a PIII since it is, with a 100 bus. I just wish Intel made the PIII stop around 1.7Ghz and then did the northwood. A 1.7Ghz PIII would equal a 2100XP. Pretty close anyway.
Well the dual 1.26GHz P3 can beat or match 1.6Ghz XP's so there arnt clock for clock the same. And the P3's will stop at 1.7GHz, intel wants to push the P4 more then the P3, even in bussiness the wana push the xeons.
SSXeon
-
Hammerhead Shark
I LOVED my PIII, and it was a slot 1 Katmai! I think the move to the P4 Willy was sheer marketing. I am not an Intel or AMD nut, just get the power I can afford at the time. But yeah I think the PIII had a long way to go before they even needed the P4.
Thing One: Core2Duo E7200 @ 3.6GHz//2x2GB OCZ DDR2 800//Asus P5Q Pro//ATi HD 4850 PCI-E//ATI TV-Wonder HD650//500GB SATA Caviar Black HDD//12x LiteOn DVD-RW//22" Acer LCD Widescreen
Thing Two: 1.6GHz Atom//1024MB SODIMM//160GB HDD//intel Graphics//8.9" LCD Screen
____________________
Heatware Evals 19-0-0
-
Hammerhead Shark
Are there any benchmarks showing the p3 outperforming the p4 or the xp athlons?
-
Hammerhead Shark
Originally posted by RPG Junkie
I disagree.........I can match a 2Ghz P4........so......take a Tualatin to about 1.6, or 1.7Ghz and it will match a 2.2 to 2.4 P4.
He meant that the Pentium III may not beat the Pentium 4 or else it wlil hurt the sells of Pentium 4.
-
Mako Shark
BELIAN: Not much bad said about the p-111 but the p-4 thats another story??? What p-4 are you talking about???
RPG JUNKIE: A p-111 1.7 will never be close to a xp2100. The xp2100 is alwready rated higher than the p-4 2.2a
AMD XP3200---INTEL P4 3200
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(") Hail bunny!
-
Hammerhead Shark
Yeah, but the p3 isn't at an IPC disadvantage with the Athlon like the P4 is. There always HAS to be a transition between architectures, and thats why the P4 was brought out when it was. I think you are gonna see the same thing as AMD tries to switch to the hammer core. These transitions are never easy and always take time, and I expect to see as many growing pains with hammer as with the P4.
2004-----------------------------------------------1986
Athlon XP 1600------------------------[email protected]
Shuttle AK31 mobo------------------no clue anymore
512MB PC2100 RAM------------------------256K RAM
Powercolor 9700 NP-----------------------4 color CGA
150(120 +30)gig hd--------------------2 x 360k 5.25 floppy
48x cd-rom--------------------------------Yeah Right!
Rhythmic Edge-----------------------------PC Speaker
-
GO BENGALS!!!!!
It's pretty cool Intel is still making the PIII. I still love mine.
-
Great White Shark
The funny thing is that many people said the same types of things about the P6 core (which was used in the PPro, PII and PIII) that they have said about the P4 for the last year or so. When the PPro was first released it was often 20% or more slower then it’s predecessor clock for clock. It was considered large, expensive, hot and power hungry.
Yet today, a 200 MHz PPro is still a credible system for most tasks. It runs Win2K quite acceptably for everything other then 3D games and can even run some of those with a good video card (Not well, but it will not be unusable.). In fact if you compared a Pentium classic and a PPro back in 1996 you would have found the Pentium classic faster by as much a 20% (as I mentioned). If you compare those very same systems today the PPro would be at least 50% faster.
The PIII is still a credible, usable system. It has, however, the same advantages over the P4 that the Pentium classic had over the PPro when it was first released. It is a mature system with lost of software support. It is in no way the technical equal of the P4 or even the Athlon. Competitive or not, as these newer processors mature they will leave the PIII in the dust. This started happening almost two years ago with the Athlon, and the P4 has outperformed the PIII on most tasks from day 1.
The only way to get a PIII to look respectable against the P4 is to cripple the P4 in some fashion or put it at a disadvantage by over clocking the PIII and not the P4.
-
Sleeps with the Fishes
Last edited by SSXeon5; 03-20-2002 at 05:55 PM.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|