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Your vapor sources again, tsk tsk. Then you conveniently claim to have known before it was all over the news sites... >>
Sheesh
Tons of people knew before it was all over the news sites, you don't have to be James Bond to get your hands on that type of information. Look at one of my earlier posts (dated BEFORE the tech sites were fully advocating this position) where I clearly state that even though mainboard manufacturers might support PC1066 with the i850e that Intel would not "necessarily" support it. At the time of that posting, I was almost positive this was the case but felt it was inappropriate to make that claim until I'd confirmed it (hence the "necessarily" verbage). As it turns out, I wasn't able to confirm it until after it was posted on tech sites, so it was a moot point. Again, if all you're going to do is criticize me without offering anything useful yourself the least you can do is read my earlier posts.
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Like the other guy said... around here at Anand's, it's all BS until you can prove it. >>
The only way to prove anything with technology is to perform the tests yourself. Mainstream tech websites hold very little weight with me due to their obvious bias and unspoken affiliations with manufacturers, and I've already stated that in my earlier posts. The fact that many people in this thread worship maximum bandwidth measurements and maximum framerates over memory latency and minimum framerates speaks volumes on how little they understand about what's important for performance in real apps vs. synthetic benchmarks.
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Don't take this the wrong way Zakule, You say 645DX, I have just one question, are you going to then discredit Oldfart's 845-D DDR400 numbers? Or should we find somebody else to do the DDR testing to compared to Fkloster's RDRAM numbers? I wouldn't bet anything just yet, but in any case, I look forward to seeing the numbers >>
Hehe, wouldn't dream of taking it the wrong way Athlon4all. I have to say that I admire you for remaining civil inspite of all of the mud slinging going on right now. I'm not discrediting Oldfart's tests, quite the opposite. I've run those same tests before and the i850 outperformed i845D, no question. However, when I compared i850 against the SiS645 I saw that the SiS chipset not only outperfomed the i850 by a slim margin but it outperformed the i845D by a quite bit (relatively speaking). So you see it's not that I'm discrediting Old Fart's test it's just that I know what to expect and in no way do I disagree that the i850 is a better performing than the i845D. What I'm saying is that it is not DDR that is to blame it is Intel's own DDR chipset.
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I too think that Intel would be very capable of crippling their DDR chipset to make Rambus look better. Capitalism makes strange bedfellows >>
I have very good reason to believe that they did just that. After the above mentioned test I did a little digging and my findings were.....interesting. No, I don't have a link to provide proof for this. What some of you are failing to acknowledge is that it is not always prudent to divulge one's sources. With respect to those individuals whom I receive occasional inside information from, I would not want to put them in a difficult position of having to explain why they told me something that they shouldn't have.
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Hey madrat...you been around here a long time...for the life of me I can't remember his username, but do you remember the guy who was @ anands for a while who 'said' he ran an engineering firm in Sweden and owned sports cars and ripped on people ect. ect. ect.? >>
First off, I did not start us down this path of flaming each other, that was you Fkloster. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy a spirited debate as much as the next fellow, but trying to paint this sort of picture of me is just pathetic considering that some others on this thread have dedicated entire posts to ripping on me. I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm trying to have fun while I'm doing this. My responses are as playful as possible since I'm trying to keep my focus on RDRAM vs DDR while fending off assaults from several off you at once. Many of you are doing nothing more than trying to find something bad to say about me at this point, which is fine with me, but I would hope for your sake that you're at least aware of this before you get firmly seated on your high-horse.
Some of you are sitting there talking about how "outlandish" my statements are mainly because you don't agree with them. I could say that it is "outlandish" to put so much emphasis on 3DMark2001 since it isn't a very effect utility for benchmarking your system, but I'm not taking that posture. I'm not implying that any of you are stupid for thinking what you do; I'd say that most of you have very good reasons for believing what you do and I respect your various opinions. The continued implication that I'm just inventing what I'm saying is ridiculously narrow-minded and a feeble retort at best. Simply because I don't quote the very benchmarks that I debunk you think I'm fabricating my statements? This, to me, could also be "outlandish," let's say. The more objective of you have realized that the only way to be sure whether or not what I'm saying is true is to personally perform benchmarks yourselves. It is to these people that I will continue to debate. Those of you who are just whining and taking shots at me, I will ignore you after this post, but please continue with your barrage of adolescent slandering. If nothing else, its entertained me (and others, I'm sure) a great deal.
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I too have read about the database file system nature of the next file system coming from MS. However a statement like this shows a big lack of understanding about most things computer related... A disk file system is the way the data or organized and ordered on the harddrive. A harddrive has an access time several orders of magnitude longer than RAM. Consider a typical harddrive with an access time of 10ms (simplified, most have a little less these days). RAM has access times of about 100ns (also simplified, and I'm including chipset latencies as well). 10 milliseconds is 10.000.000 nanoseconds. So by the time the CPU waits for the harddrive access it can access RAM about 100.000 times! The difference in access time between different RAM types is very insignificant in this sense (about 10-20ns or so). >>
You make an excellent point, and I think that what is partially lacking here is the context from which I took this quote on NT6. Even within context, the paragraph is poorly worded insofar as it trys to illustrate why RDRAM will have a negative effect on a database filesystem. As I'm sure you know, there is more to managing a file system within an OS than the harddisk itself. However, I am now relunctant to divulge the identity of somebody whom I have a great deal of respect and admiration for since a few of the people in this thread seem to have difficulty controlling themselves. Perhaps, when the fire calms down and the children have left then I will post the source of this information so that you and others can benefit from the full dissertation. There is most definitely a problem with NT6's new filesystem and RDRAM, but I agree that the blurb I posted doesn't adequately discuss why and by itself it sounds like a misrepresentation. My bad on that one.