And as Dean pointed out:
2Ghz Xeon MP with 2MB L3 cache: 842 SPECint
In other words, the P4 eats the Itanium for breakfast even if you limit it
to 2GHz due to some "process" rule.
And if you don't make up any silly rules, but simply look at "what's
available today", you get
2.8Ghz Xeon MP with 2MB L3 cache: 907 SPECint
or even better (much cheaper CPUs):
3.06 GHz P4 with 512kB L2 cache: 1074 SPECint
AMD Athlon XP 2800+: 933 SPECint
These are systems that you can buy today. With _less_ cache, and clearly
much higher performance (the difference between the best-performing
published ia-64 and the best P4 on specint, the P4 is 32% faster. Even
with the "you can only run the P4 at 2GHz because that is all it ever ran
at in 0.18" thing the ia-64 falls behind.
> Linus> The only thing that is meaningful is "performace at the same
> Linus> time of general availability".
>
> You claimed that x86 is inherently superior. I provided data that
> shows that much of this apparent superiority is simply an effect of
> the larger volume that x86 achieves today.
And I showed that your data is flawed. Clearly the P4 outperforms ia-64
on an architectural level _even_ when taking process into account.
Linus
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