Michael Miles wrote:
> I can't wait to see the Bulldozer series in action ( 16 cores 
> Hyperthreaded) yeah baby..........

Unfortunately, Bulldozer doesn’t do conventional SMT (which is what
Intel usually¹ means by hyperthreading). It has two integer cores
sharing a wide floating point engine and level 2 cache. This combination
is what AMD call a “module”, but they will be selling it as two cores.

So a 16 core Bulldozer will have 16 hardware threads.

A module takes more power and area than a traditional core with
hyperthreading, but you should get more performance out of it, too.

Sorry,

James.

¹ Hyperthreading is an Intel trademark, and, as such, means precisely
what Intel wants it to mean at the moment. This can change (it means
something different for the Itanium).

-- 
E-mail:     james@ | “Never trust a species that grins all the time.
aprilcottage.co.uk | It’s up to something.”
                   |     -- Terry Pratchett, about dolphins
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