Your point?
I do not know why Intel priced their Pentium EE 840 at 1030USD, but simply claiming that Intel's using aggressive pricing by basing on the fact that Core 2 Duo cost less than Pentium D is moot. Core 2 Duo features less transistors than Pentium D, so why should it costs more? (Conroe: 291mil, Presler: 376mil)
AMD is a year late to releasing quad core. Guess what, when AMD's busy trying to get Barcelona to work, Intel has already shipped 1 million quad cores by June. If we divide that with the market share, AMD would've at least sold 250,000 quad cores, and save their bleeding company.
SIA didn't establish the fabrication process schedule, but as AMD's main competitor move to 45nm, AMD would be in a financially disadvantage to not implement 45nm. With die size of 283mm^2, how much more dies can AMD produce
if they move to 45nm? Concerning the current yield of Barcelona, wouldn't it make sense to move to 45nm?
Doug Freedman has already expressed his opinion on this, calling Barcelona a "mismatch with AMD's current 65nm".
An analyst said that AMD's quad-core "Barcelona" Opteron processor is an "architectural mismatch" with the 65-nanometer process it is being built on. "We believe the company's late Barcelona introduction and disappointing early performance are an early indication of a bad marriage of process technology and design that will be hard to fix before a move to 45-nm is required," said analyst Doug Freedman of American Technology Research, in a report cited by several news outlets Friday.
http://www.x86watch.com/articles/amd_barcelona_process_mismatch_120.html
I'm sure he won't be the last one expressing that opinion.
As a head's up, Intel is "still using" x86 too. It's a pretty interesting story on how Intel came into their x86-64 instruction set, you should research that.
Let's see... AMD and Intel both developed their x86-64, but AMD got it working first. Intel then sued AMD for not sharing the technology under their license agreement.
Your point? I never discredited AMD64 for being the first instruction set to support both x86 and x64, but it's too early for its time. Please tell me how many computer users, besides servers, are using x64 programs? How many users actually see improvement in 64bit environment?
I'm sorry that you felt that way, but I do this because I hate it when someone just outright spreading FUD, with little to no backups. I was not the one who started to go off topic, but I was the one who responded when he's giving out mis-information.