techPowerUp! Forums

Go Back   techPowerUp! Forums > www.techpowerup.com > News

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old Jul 6, 2009, 01:43 PM   #1
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
 
btarunr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Hyderabad, India
Posts: 14,983 (7.29/day)
Thanks: 788
Thanked 12,911 Times in 5,655 Posts
Send a message via AIM to btarunr Send a message via MSN to btarunr

System Specs

Intel SandyBridge Mainstream Quad-Core CPU Architecture Surfaces

Intel is on a golden path, showing no signs of a slowdown as far as technology development is concerned. After having pushed its 32 nm manufacturing node and its derived Westmere architecture to production grade, Intel seems to have already made a prototype on the 32 nm node, which will serve a technology leap on 32 nm. The company uses a "tick-tock" model of process development, where each processor architecture gets to be made in two manufacturing processes, while each process gets to build two succeeding architectures. The current Nehalem architecture meets 32 nm with the Westmere architecture, while the 32 nm node meets its next architecture with the SandyBridge.

SandyBridge is characterised by a larger level of integration of components. While Nehalem and Westmere "Lynnfield" and "Clarksfield" mainstream processors use a multi-chip module that holds the CPU and north-bridge dice, SandyBridge will see an integration of both into a monolithic, rectangular die spreading across an area of around 225 sq. mm. Significant portions of the die will be occupied with a DirectX 11-compliant integrated graphics processor, the "SandyBridge System Agent" (a component which includes a PCI-Express hub, and DMI. The L3 cache is the largest component on the die. It will have a large 256-bit ring-topology, which lets it not only perform cache operations, but also as a fast transport medium between the various components.

There are four x86-64 processing cores with their own 256 KB L2 caches, and will feature the Advanced Vector eXtensions (AVX), the next generation SIMD instruction set. With so much packed, the chip will have a rated TDP of "only" 85W. When in production, it could come with clock speeds as high as 3.80 GHz. There is an indication that this chip will retain the LGA-1156 package to keep the upgrade path in progress. Interestingly, the chip is taped out in this quarter, while it will reach production-grade in the first quarter of 2011. Meanwhile LGA-1366 gets its next big thing with the Westmere-based Core i9 hexa-core processor.



Source: CanardPC

Last edited by btarunr; Jul 6, 2009 at 06:13 PM.
btarunr is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:35 PM   #2
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Wow, and only a year and half to wait. This will completely discourage people from i9.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:36 PM   #3
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
 
btarunr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Hyderabad, India
Posts: 14,983 (7.29/day)
Thanks: 788
Thanked 12,911 Times in 5,655 Posts
Send a message via AIM to btarunr Send a message via MSN to btarunr

System Specs

You mean Core i5/i7(1156), because this is not a match for i9.
__________________

Gadgets, Phones, Tablets, Cameras, TVs, HiFi...NextPowerUp
btarunr is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:37 PM   #4
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by btarunr View Post
You mean Core i5/i7(1156), because this is not a match for i9.
I assume that's a mistranslation of some sort.

How can this possibly not compete with i9 and indeed anything higher? It has a graphics card and a NB attached inside of it.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:37 PM   #5
cray86
75 Posts
 
cray86's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Springfield, IL
Posts: 96 (0.05/day)
Thanks: 12
Thanked 10 Times in 9 Posts

System Specs

I would really enjoy HDV rendering on an 8-core... really... enjoy.

The integration of the graphics matched with laptops will be very effective for casual consumers. Can't wait to see how it pans out.
__________________
"Law never made man a wit more just, and by the means of their respect of it, are daily made agents of injustice"

I am postmodern. I am not postmodern. I like cute puppies. She and Him Volume One makes me happy.
cray86 is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:40 PM   #6
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
 
btarunr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Hyderabad, India
Posts: 14,983 (7.29/day)
Thanks: 788
Thanked 12,911 Times in 5,655 Posts
Send a message via AIM to btarunr Send a message via MSN to btarunr

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
I assume that's a mistranslation of some sort.

How can this possibly not compete with i9 and indeed anything higher? It has a graphics card and a NB attached inside of it.
There is no mistranslation. This has 4 cores, dual-channel memory, and an IGP. i9 has 6 cores, triple-channel memory. This is a successor for Lynnfield, not Bloomfield. i9 is a different upgrade path.
__________________

Gadgets, Phones, Tablets, Cameras, TVs, HiFi...NextPowerUp
btarunr is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:41 PM   #7
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by btarunr View Post
There is no mistranslation. This has 4 cores, dual-channel memory, and an IGP. i9 has 8 cores, triple-channel memory. This is successor for Lynnfield, not Bloomfield. i9 is a different upgrade path.

If 1366 is only going to have more cores, it's not even going in the right direction. This.. is far more complex.

Also, since when is i9 an octo-core? Last I heard it was six.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:44 PM   #8
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
 
btarunr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Hyderabad, India
Posts: 14,983 (7.29/day)
Thanks: 788
Thanked 12,911 Times in 5,655 Posts
Send a message via AIM to btarunr Send a message via MSN to btarunr

System Specs

If you think this is the right direction, and faster than what LGA-1366 and its upgrade path offers, play the waiting game. The die-shot itself says it's a mainstream part.
__________________

Gadgets, Phones, Tablets, Cameras, TVs, HiFi...NextPowerUp
btarunr is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:48 PM   #9
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by btarunr View Post
If you think this is the right direction, and faster than what LGA-1366 and its upgrade path offers, play the waiting game. The die-shot itself says it's a mainstream part.
You were right to add that. The die shot proves it.

But you can't deny that this is the future. It's a single chip that houses all the important parts of the motherboard control. Perhaps they wish to make the argument that integrated graphics inside a CPU cannot yet be high-end, but my point is that this is not a CPU.. it's something much more. This really came out of left field. I do not understand why i9 can't have a built-in NB-SB as well. Unless of course.. it scrapped those solely in order to have double the performance. That still seems crazy. But, if i9 really does have 8 cores, it's mine.

Actually, if they are offering this a whole year after i9 gets released, it's not even in competition with i9, rather with whatever comes afterwards.

It also situates the longevity of the current generation of sockets where 1156 will be here at least two years into the future. And.. it's nice to see there are no more Dual-core CPU's.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 02:52 PM   #10
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,583 (6.28/day)
Thanks: 1,755
Thanked 2,599 Times in 1,962 Posts

System Specs

Hyperthreading? Wha? Sandy Bridge was supposed to be based on Core 2. The Core 2 architecture has little to gain from hyperthreading. Is that a typo/speculation?


In a high end system (dedicated GPU detected), the architecture may be designed to use the integrated graphics as a extra FPU(s) meaning higher floating point performance. <-- Speculation.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }

Last edited by FordGT90Concept; Jul 6, 2009 at 03:02 PM.
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 03:04 PM   #11
Duncan1
75 Posts
 
Duncan1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: greece
Posts: 84 (0.06/day)
Thanks: 28
Thanked 13 Times in 12 Posts
Send a message via MSN to Duncan1

Quote:
Originally Posted by source
Grâce ŕ une fréquence d’environ 1.2 GHz, ce cśur prévu pour ętre compatible avec DirectX 11, ne devrait pas ętre ridicule sans toutefois ętre un foudre de guerre
DirectX 11 compatible IGP? Holy s*it!
__________________


- The quieter you become, the more you are able to ''hear'' -
Duncan1 is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 03:15 PM   #12
tastegw
200 Posts
 
tastegw's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 273 (0.17/day)
Thanks: 38
Thanked 139 Times in 65 Posts

System Specs

expected q1 2011 @ 3.0-3.8GHz

nice.
__________________
tastegw is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 03:25 PM   #13
A Cheese Danish
1000 Posts
 
A Cheese Danish's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: At your local vending machine
Posts: 1,914 (0.80/day)
Thanks: 121
Thanked 419 Times in 368 Posts
Send a message via AIM to A Cheese Danish

System Specs

Seems like Intel has a lot coming out the end of this year and next year.
Can't wait to see the performance for both the i9 and these sandybridge procs
__________________
My FS/FT Thread
HEATWARE Xfire Steam ID
Certs: MCTS, MCITP, HP APS
Server: AMD Opteron 170 @2.95GHz | 4GB DDR 3-3-2-7 | 1x Samsung SPT 500GB, 2x WD Black 2TB, 2x 1.5TB Western Digital MyBook
A Cheese Danish is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 03:57 PM   #14
Duncan1
75 Posts
 
Duncan1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: greece
Posts: 84 (0.06/day)
Thanks: 28
Thanked 13 Times in 12 Posts
Send a message via MSN to Duncan1

Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
Wow, and only a year and half to wait. This will completely discourage people from i9.
No, the future competitor of i9 is probably the Haswell (8 cores, 22nm, succesor of Sandy Bridge)
__________________


- The quieter you become, the more you are able to ''hear'' -
Duncan1 is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 04:02 PM   #15
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Duncan1 View Post
No, the future competitor of i9 is probably the Haswell (8 cores, 22nm, succesor of Sandy Bridge)
And unlike Sandy, it's not going to be produced by Intel Israel.

At which point, I would like to give a shout-out to all the world's-best scientists working in Israel.


Also, I'M GOING TO HAVE TO WAIT 'TILL 2011 NOW?! GAAAAWD!
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 04:46 PM   #16
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
 
DrPepper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Scotland (It rains alot)
Posts: 6,423 (3.28/day)
Thanks: 977
Thanked 828 Times in 667 Posts
Send a message via MSN to DrPepper Send a message via Skype™ to DrPepper

System Specs

This is some pretty serious architecture. I've never seen a CPU with so much on it.

We have 4 cores that are pretty beefy, including the northbridge and a GPU Then we have 32kb L1 cache which is pretty standard and the 256kb present on core i7 and the 8mb L3 to make up for the lack of L2 cache but I don't think it will be enough compensation since the IGP is connected as well.

All this though on the 32nm process is quite impressive.
DrPepper is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 04:55 PM   #17
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPepper View Post
This is some pretty serious architecture. I've never seen a CPU with so much on it.

We have 4 cores that are pretty beefy, including the northbridge and a GPU Then we have 32kb L1 cache which is pretty standard and the 256kb present on core i7 and the 8mb L3 to make up for the lack of L2 cache but I don't think it will be enough compensation since the IGP is connected as well.

All this though on the 32nm process is quite impressive.
Actually, I disagree. Nope, there is nothing impressive here.

Move along people...
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:06 PM   #18
kylzer
Banned
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: 192.168.1.1
Posts: 484 (0.33/day)
Thanks: 113
Thanked 79 Times in 51 Posts
Send a message via MSN to kylzer

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
Actually, I disagree. Nope, there is nothing impressive here.

Move along people...
looks like a i5 refresh with a gpu ........so your right i guess.
kylzer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:07 PM   #19
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
 
DrPepper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Scotland (It rains alot)
Posts: 6,423 (3.28/day)
Thanks: 977
Thanked 828 Times in 667 Posts
Send a message via MSN to DrPepper Send a message via Skype™ to DrPepper

System Specs

You have to be sarcastic. Hard to tell from text.
DrPepper is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:07 PM   #20
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,583 (6.28/day)
Thanks: 1,755
Thanked 2,599 Times in 1,962 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
And unlike Sandy, it's not going to be produced by Intel Israel.

At which point, I would like to give a shout-out to all the world's-best scientists working in Israel.


Also, I'M GOING TO HAVE TO WAIT 'TILL 2011 NOW?! GAAAAWD!
Haswell is a die shrink of Sandy Bridge.

I think the first of the 32nm Westmere chips are coming out Q4 '09 or Q1 '10. If you're looking to buy, I wouldn't wait any longer than that. They should help alleviate the major heat issue seen in the 45nm Nehalems. Heat could be the number one reason why Intel is waiting to release more Core i# processors.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
Actually, I disagree. Nope, there is nothing impressive here.

Move along people...
In part, I agree. The only thing impressive is the monolithic design as Dr. Pepper was pointing out...

At this point, I'm confused as to what "it" is. Is it a P6 derivative or a NetBurst derivative? I expected it to be a P6 derivative--something the Israel branch has been working on since Penryn. The picture makes the claim it is a NetBurst derivative. I don't know what to expect anymore.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:44 PM   #21
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
Haswell is a die shrink of Sandy Bridge.

I think the first of the 32nm Westmere chips are coming out Q4 '09 or Q1 '10. If you're looking to buy, I wouldn't wait any longer than that. They should help alleviate the major heat issue seen in the 45nm Nehalems. Heat could be the number one reason why Intel is waiting to release more Core i# processors.



In part, I agree. The only thing impressive is the monolithic design as Dr. Pepper was pointing out...

At this point, I'm confused as to what "it" is. Is it a P6 derivative or a NetBurst derivative? I expected it to be a P6 derivative--something the Israel branch has been working on since Penryn. The picture makes the claim it is a NetBurst derivative. I don't know what to expect anymore.

Good news then! My plan is to buy a new PC when GTX 380 comes out. If I can get an 8-core 32nm CPU by that time, it'll be perfect. Then I'll wait until dies can no longer be shrunk.

Ever since C2D came out three years ago, I've been hearing nothing but rants about the thermal envelope. They said 45nm would fix it, now they're saying that i7 has heat issues too. The reason Netburst overheated was exactly because of the shrinkage in die. The pipes were too small and they leaked. The tri-pipe design and indeed the architecture is what counts. CPU's are always going to have 'heat issues'.

I assume it is P6. That is only a sketch, as far as I know.. although Intel has been pretty accurate about releasing information for a long time.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:46 PM   #22
ShadowFold
Eligible for custom title
 
ShadowFold's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Omaha, NE
Posts: 12,855 (6.49/day)
Thanks: 1,381
Thanked 1,681 Times in 1,498 Posts
Send a message via MSN to ShadowFold Send a message via Skype™ to ShadowFold

System Specs

Is the 85w the WHOLE chip? That's pretty impressive. But then again, I don't think NB really use that much wattage do they? Either way, this looks to be pretty good. I hope the price is right
ShadowFold is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 05:47 PM   #23
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by ShadowFold View Post
Is the 85w the WHOLE chip? That's pretty impressive. But then again, I don't think NB really use that much wattage do they? Either way, this looks to be pretty good. I hope the price is right
Seems like they do. They usually get pretty hot. And this can't be fully accurate because they haven't made the chip yet. It's still got years to go.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 06:19 PM   #24
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,583 (6.28/day)
Thanks: 1,755
Thanked 2,599 Times in 1,962 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Weer View Post
Ever since C2D came out three years ago, I've been hearing nothing but rants about the thermal envelope. They said 45nm would fix it, now they're saying that i7 has heat issues too. The reason Netburst overheated was exactly because of the shrinkage in die. The pipes were too small and they leaked. The tri-pipe design and indeed the architecture is what counts. CPU's are always going to have 'heat issues'.
I went into detail about this previously. Basically, the TDP is limited to about 130w because Intel doesn't want to put more money into heatsinks. There's only so many transistors one can fit on a chip before they hit the maximum of the heatsink.

Nehalem can hit 85C on the stock HSF (it starts cutting back speed/voltage at 100C). Core i5 and most likely, Core i3 will have more total transistors because of their MCM northbridge on-die (I think the northbridge is also 65nm rather than 45nm). This means that in order for Intel to make it all fit and still beat Core 2 Quad, they have to shrink the die.


I couldn't find any power specs on X58 chipset. I'd imagine it is lower than those from Core 2 just because it is one chip instead of two.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Jul 6, 2009, 06:57 PM   #25
Weer
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: New York / Israel
Posts: 1,293 (0.61/day)
Thanks: 60
Thanked 95 Times in 73 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
I went into detail about this previously. Basically, the TDP is limited to about 130w because Intel doesn't want to put more money into heatsinks. There's only so many transistors one can fit on a chip before they hit the maximum of the heatsink.

Nehalem can hit 85C on the stock HSF (it starts cutting back speed/voltage at 100C). Core i5 and most likely, Core i3 will have more total transistors because of their MCM northbridge on-die (I think the northbridge is also 65nm rather than 45nm). This means that in order for Intel to make it all fit and still beat Core 2 Quad, they have to shrink the die.


I couldn't find any power specs on X58 chipset. I'd imagine it is lower than those from Core 2 just because it is one chip instead of two.
That's extremely basic.. quite different from what I said.

I mean, if the metal provided with the CPU was the problem, someone would have thought about it already.
The thing is.. it really doesn't matter any bit if you buy an after-market cooler. You will get to the same performance with said cooler. Be it because the chip has more transistors and thus higher performance in all, or because it is clocked higher.
Weer is offline  
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Intel Planning New Budget Quad-Core CPU Lineup btarunr News 27 Jan 21, 2009 04:34 AM
Intel to Launch its First Quad-core Mobile CPU in 3Q08 malware News 20 Mar 16, 2008 06:21 PM
Intel to Phase Out First Quad-core CPU Soon malware News 6 Sep 10, 2007 09:36 PM
Linux Performance on Intel Core Architecture (benchmark & review vs. other cpu types) Alec§taar Linux / BSD / Mac OS X 1 Aug 24, 2006 04:33 AM
Intel Kentsfield quad core CPU in Q1 2007 POGE News 1 Mar 26, 2006 03:03 PM


All times are GMT. The time now is 04:07 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
no new posts