[NTLUG:Discuss] Sempron discussion after Sep 18 meeting

Bryan J. Smith b.j.smith at ieee.org
Mon Sep 20 20:00:22 CDT 2004


Sempron is not a core or a fixed processor. 
It is a market name for Socket-462, 754 and, in the near future, 939, with ratings against the Intel _Celeron_.
AMD ships processors of each platform
(e.g., Athlon Model 10 w/256KB L2 for Socket-462, Newcastle w/256KB and 64-bit portions of registers locked out for Socket-754/939).
Besides marketing better against Celeron, it allows AMD to reuse damaged wafers and use older fabs.

For more on the advantages of Opteron (and Athlon64/Sempron) from an interconnect standpoint,
be sure to pick up Sys Admin 2004 November went it comes out next month.


-- 
Bryan J. Smith (currently mobile)
b.j.smith at ieee.org

-----Original Message-----
From:  Pat Regan 
Date:  04-9-20 18:59
To:  NTLUG Discussion List 
Subj:  Re: [NTLUG:Discuss] Sempron discussion after Sep 18 meeting


On Mon, 20 Sep 2004, JD wrote:

> >Thank you for pointing this out.  When I saw word of the Sempron, I just
> >ignored it thinking "eh, a new Duron" :p.  Interesting that the high end
> >Sempron is a castrated Athlon 64 :).
>
> I think AMD choose the name of the new chip to sound similar to the Intel
> Celeron.
>
> The Sempron chip is *not* a high end processor.   At least, the one that I
> purchased
> wasn't very high-end.  The combo [ECS board and a 2.2G CPU] was all of
> $59.  Throw in
> a decent fan and 256M of 2700 DDR memory - I walked out of Fry's for under
> $125.

I'm sorry, I didn't mean to make it sound like I thought the Sempron was
"high end."  What I meant was that I was surprised to find that the top of
the line Sempron seems to be based on the 64 bit core, as opposed to
pretty much just a rename for the Duron.

Pat


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