You are cutting my words and playing with them. Don't put words in my mouth. I asked you which person can upgrade their old Tbirds to Bartons 400s on the same mobo.tell me which schmuck actually got to upgrade his 1GHZ ", i upgraded thunderbird to palomino to tbred, my father has, my brother will shortly and my uncle has, i'm sure millions of other people have to. socket A with 266 bus has been around for a long time, give AMD credit for that.
Heck, I even mentioned old chipsets like the 750. Yet you put words in my mouth. Do that again and I won't have to waste my time argumenting with someone who can't.
No I am not.you are confused,
It just proves you really did not read before replying to this discussion. Here, FYI, again is the Inquirer quote:
And I am commenting that should this be true, it will be ridiculous. Stupid on their part to have 3 pin versions for one core already, when Intel wouldn't do that yet.When AMD releases the Athlon 64 in September, it is widely expected to introduce a 754 pin model and a 940 pin model too.
But it also has plans for a 939 pin CPU and we presume this will slot into 940 sockets – otherwise the mobo makers will go stark staring bonkers
If we were to stay on the Socket-only argument, Socket 478 will have been a very long socket life. If we were to talk about compatibility however, it's another entirely different story. But since fanboys just LOVE to use the "same-socket" argument in favor of AMD, I'd love to see just how truthful it is. Yes, it has more upgradability, but not BY THAT MUCH. It's a huge overrated statement to say you can upgrade easily. Most can't or won't. Instead they will go upgrade and buy an nForce 2 mainboard. Most won't be able to upgrade to a CPU Barton only.i am glad you mention the socket 478 and prescott, as prescott will shortly change to a different socket so 478 prescotts will have a very short lifespan!!
And in no way do I applaud them for it. However Socket 423 was a mistake all by itself, it had electrical problems and was huge. Socket 478 is the true P4 socket IMO. Besides, Socket 370 has been around, mind you, for 3 years now easily.but intel does that all the time to.
An Intel employee told me in fact that Intel's engineers use a very lazy tactic of not planifying for future socket switches with technology added. I commented on how lazy it was but we both agreed. That's probably the worst thing those engineers could do on themselves. Then again Athlons have not had such a huge change in themselves internally, compared to how much the P7 core will. From having:
-Added cache
-To 2 extra bus speeds
-To HyperThreading
-To all of Prescott's added improvements including once again added cache
-To (if Tejas is P7) even more improvements by Tejas
It is fairly obvious Intel is improving a lot, and that requires socket changes, logically. AMD didn't do much improvements mind you, which only explains why Socket A was so viable, and why upgrading fairly aged chipsets (excluding any Barton 400MT upgrade since no chipset without 400MT support can) could still work with newer CPUs.
Intel OTOH has tons of extra features, which logically requires more advanced chipsets and mainboards.
Then leave. No offense, but here at THG, we DEBATE and debate HARD when we have on the other line, people who don't properly argument or resort to weak facts. And I do enjoy in fact being agressive in debating when the other party does those things I mentioned. Convince me and be more realistic, (and stop modifying what I say) and we'd have a good calm debate.your reply to me was very agressive, this was innappropriate as this community is for discussion not arguements, it is common knowledge that intel changes specification more often than AMD.
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