Re: Intel vs AMD x86-64
From: Timothy Miller
Date: Sun Feb 22 2004 - 19:31:36 EST
Scott Robert Ladd wrote:
Linus Torvalds wrote:
Any Intel people on this list: tell your managers to be f*cking
ashamed of
themselves. Just because Intel didn't care about their customers and has
been playing with some other 64-bit architecture that nobody wanted to
use
is no excuse for not giving credit to AMD for what they did with x86-64.
(I'm really happy Intel finally got with the program, but it's pretty
petty to not even mention AMD in the documentation and try to make it
look like it was all their idea).
I couldn't have put it better myself. Were it polite to attach sounds to
mailing list posts, I would add thunderous applause to my approbations.
Intel chips have been a part of my professional life for a very long
time; I've never owned an AMD processor, and I'm certainly not one of
their fanboys. I've worked closely with folk at Intel on some projects,
and they have been quite generous at times. Some fine technologists work
for them.
But on a corporate level, Intel has disappointed me with their arrogant
failure to give credit where credit is due.
Last week, before Intel's announcement, I ordered a new Linux
workstation. As a "lone wolf" consultant, I sometimes agonize over
whether I make the right decisions when buying equipment. In this case,
I feeling pretty dang good: the new system will arrive with a pair of
Opterons on the motherboard.
I don't know how accurate this information is, but... (take it with a
grain of salt)
I have a good friend who worked at a lab where a lot of scientific
simulations were being done. Lots of floating-point math. His
colleagues tried both AMD and Intel processors. According to this
friend, what they found was that not only were the AMD processors FASTER
at FP math, but the results they got were also a lot more ACCURATE when
dealing with computations at the far end of FP precision.
In theory, IEEE FP is IEEE FP, but it seems that Intel may have cheated
in their design, silently reducing precision for the sake of some other
aspect of their design, making their processors less useful (or
useless?) for scientific applications. Another example of Intel
arrogance? Or perhaps a reasonable design compromise? You decide.
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