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Intel Tests Show PC133 SDRAM Bests RDRAM

Intel | Posted by timothy on Sunday July 09, @10:54PM
from the obligatory-note-benchmarks-=/=-real-world dept.
SteveM wrote citing an Semiconductor Business News article which begins: "SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Here's a surprise. Benchmark test results from Intel Corp. show its new 815E chip set with PC133 SDRAMs beating the performance of its 820 chip set with Direct Rambus memories. Moreover, Intel has posted those unexpected test results on its Web site, not intending to show PC133 SDRAMs beating the Direct Rambus memory format, which is favored by the Santa Clara chip giant." The results actually show some fairly unspectacular differences, but those differences lean overwhelmingly in favor of the SDRAM. Surely someone will come up with a benchmark that always makes RDRAM look better.

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(Score:4, Interesting)
by Christopher Thomas on Sunday July 09, @11:01PM EDT
(User Info)

Tom's Hardware did a moderately detailed benchmark of SDRAM vs. RDRAM a while back.

Which is better? It depends on both the montherboard configuration and on what you're doing.

Intel's high-end RDRAM motherboard beat the hell out of SDRAM systems. It had two interleaved RIMM slots, doubling effective bandwidth.

Intel's more recent SDRAM offerings have generally been pretty bad. Via chipsets put out a good effort, but were still beaten out by the high-end RDRAM systems and the BX board.

The best SDRAM offering was a 440 BX board overclocked to 133 FSB. Tom swears it's stable. YMMV.

As far as load is concerned, RDRAM is optimized for throughput, SDRAM is optimized for latency. Something that hits many cache rows in more or less random order taking only a little data from each will work well with SDRAM. Something that processes large amounts of data in more or less linear order will work well with RDRAM. It depends on what you're doing.

My personal opinion? RDRAM is a bad implementation of a good idea. In five years we might see something better. For now, by DDR SDRAM. YMMV.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Re:Intel's conspiracy?

(Score:4, Interesting)
by kirkb on Sunday July 09, @11:11PM EDT
(User Info)

I think Intel needs to come clean as to why exactly it's still pushing Rambus memory so hard.

Other than the fact that they own Rambus? How about profits from licensing Rambus technology? How about using patents to put the squeeze on SDRAM manufacturers? How about designing future CPU's and chipsets so that rambus is the ONLY memory that is supported?

We love to bash M$ because we are visibly affected by their evilness on a daily basis, but I think most people would be suprised by the kind of nasty stuff that Intel gets away with (just ask intergraph!)
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Re:yeah

(Score:3, Informative)
by CMiYC (cmiycii@hotmail.com) on Sunday July 09, @11:16PM EDT
(User Info)

Maybe I'm just not enough of a hardware junkie, but are a few percentage points difference that big a deal?

I think the big deal is the fact that RDRAM is suppose to be so much better in terms of performance than SDRAM. The very fact that SDRAM matches or beats or loses by so little causes one to wonder why spend the extra $$$ for RDRAM. So, no... in terms of performance only a few percentage points don't matter. But if you look at the overall picture: price, availability, compatbility, APPLCATION.... which technology do you really need?

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"Both players [MPMan and the RIO] were able to withstand a vigorous shaking with no skips whatsoever" --Matt Rosoff, C|net [ Reply to This | Parent ]

Re:This changes nothing

(Score:3, Insightful)
by CMiYC (cmiycii@hotmail.com) on Sunday July 09, @11:21PM EDT
(User Info)

Rambus handily outperforms PC133 DIMMs, and is worth the extra expense

I think that the benchmarks make you step back and think. Do you really need to spend the money on Rambus? Think of it this way, if you were about to invest in a Rambus system just because you thought it was faster than PC133... you might be surprised to find out that whatever your application is, SDRAM performs just as good.

So, think of it in that respect, it all depends on the application and if the application warrents the cost. If your specific application won't gain anything out of it, why spend the money? On the otherhand, you might be able to rest assured that the money is well spent.......(which I know most people here won't think that way, they'll just look at the numbers, but hey that's life).

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"Both players [MPMan and the RIO] were able to withstand a vigorous shaking with no skips whatsoever" --Matt Rosoff, C|net [ Reply to This | Parent ]

Yes, Intel thinks users will remain dumb forever.

(Score:5, Insightful)
by Sir_Winston on Monday July 10, @01:04AM EDT
(User Info)

Intel's philosophy is no different from Microsoft's: Embrace, extend, extinguish. I'm just amazed that your typical Microsoft-bashing /.ers aren't Intel bashers, too, because Intel deserves a big ol' can of whoopass opened right by their corporate asses. Let's examine a little...

First off, Intel has been in the process of developing standards for the PC architecture for some time, as well it should. However, they've doing it the same way Microsoft has been "contributing" to Internet standards. For example, they developed AGP up to 4x, which has proven to be very useful; however, rumours are churning out from reputable sources discussing an Intel project to create a successor to AGP 4x, and this successor is to be limited to Intel chipsets and chipsets made by select Intel partners--i.e., anyone who annoys Intel will get left behind. Intel developed PC-100 memory standards--a great service, but...then it refused to develop PC-133 standard or DDR-SDRAM specifications, because of its own interest in RDRAM as a wholesale replacement for all SDRAM.

Many have questioned that Intel has much to gain from Rambus becoming the new standard instead of DDR-SDRAM; after all, contrary to popular belief Intel doesn't completely own Rambus, and their deal with Rambus would only give them compensation in the tens of millions, which isn't much for a company whose revenues are in the billions each year. But what Intel has to gain isn't direct monetary compensation by Rambus, it's *control* over the standards for memory and memory controllers--and the rights to manufacture and license those memory controller technologies. This is exactly what MS did with IE--it didn't directly make a profit by developing a new web browser and bundling it with Windows; it gained market control and the ability to manipulate the Internet protocols so that all its products, from IIS to Frontpage to NT Server and the rest, had an advantage of guaranteed interoperability and increased functionality over competing products.

Intel wants to do the same with RDRAM and its new IA64 architecture, and its new forays into the emerging appliance market. Intel will make royalties on all chipsets which support RDRAM. Intel will make direct profits on its IA64 processors and has probably been hoping to licence the ISA to competitors once x86 plateaus. Intel has purchased the StronARM and other embedded/appliance hardware companies, hoping to leverage its market dominance to push it into every area. And, let's not forget that they tried and tried and tried to force their way into the graphics market, but failed there due to too-short product cycles and competitors with much more graphics experience.

It's clear that Intel wants to be the Microsoft of the hardware world. If they leverage enough tech patents on all fronts, they can force use of their products in the same unfair ways Microsoft leveraged itself into every crevice: big OEMs unable to get the best prices on Intel desktop processors unless they agree to use StrongARM in their embedded/appliance products instead of Transmeta or MIPS, or unable to get hold of ahort-supplied IA64 for workstations/servers unless they use P4 in their desktops, VIA unable to make the most advanced RDRAM chipsets unless they cut back on DDR or agree not to pursue QDR, etc. Don't think it won't happen, even with M$ as an example: there are many sneaky, below-the-board ways to hint at such matters without bluntly making demands.

And, since everyone here hates the x86 architecture so much, why the Hell are so many /.ers such big Intel fans? They're the companywhich kept pushing x86 for decades instead of developing something new and improved and more RISCy, so why so many Intel apologists and AMD naysayers? After all, as good and serviceable as the P6 core was, it didn't deserve to stay in service for 5+ years. AMD may have been a dog back then, but at least it made radical improvements with almost every product cycle; Intel just wasn't trying at all. And look at the disaster which

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