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The Mother of All CPU Charts Part 1

From:  kayodeok <news4kayode@btopenworld.com>
Date:  Tue, 21 Dec 2004 08:48:19 +0000 (UTC)
Newsgroups:  grc.linkfarm,grc.techtalk

The Mother of All CPU Charts Part 1

From 1995 To 2005: 111 CPUs From 100 MHz To 3800 MHz

Ladies and gentlemen, fasten your seatbelts, because here we go. 
After 12 weeks of grueling and meticulous testing in our Munich THG 
lab, our biggest CPU test of all time is complete. Marathon, all-
night monitoring sessions, system hiccups and crashes and the 
logistics involved in coordinating such a feat often short-
circuited our caffeine-addled nerves. But then again, this project 
was about more than just tallying up CPU benchmarks. Indeed, it was 
fascination (or was it an obsession?) with the course taken by CPU 
technology in the past 11 years that motivated THG to conduct a 
comparative test of this magnitude. In Part I of this series, we 
take a look at the beginnings of the CPU and move up through the 
very latest from Intel. Tomorrow, we continue with a focus on AMD's 
development in history, and bring you the results of our benchmark 
tests as well.

Many readers still remember the days when a PC system with Pentium 
100 and 16 MB memory was "state of the art" and counted as the 
ultimate equipment for an enthusiastic student. That was in 1994, 
when this computer sold for just under $3000. Today the ex-student 
may work in an IT company or has his own company and makes 
decisions on investments. How times change.

Overall, 111 different processors dating from 1995 to today are 
being subjected to a uniform, comprehensive testing procedure. This 
monster comparison can be seen as a journey through time that very 
clearly reflects how brilliantly the performance of chips and, 
ultimately, of PC systems has changed over a very short period. But 
performance is not the only thing that many users take for granted 
when spending their money. What is not visible to many are is the 
multitude of technical changes that components and standards have 
undergone. The test will provide insights into this topic as well.

Starting with the CPU platforms - from Socket 5 from 1995 to the 
current Socket 775 - no less than seven different evolutionary 
stages were observed in the case of processor manufacturer Intel 
alone. During the same period, AMD launched five platforms, from 
Socket 7 to Socket 939.

With subdued pride, we can state that this is the most 
comprehensive CPU comparison and benchmark marathon on the 
Internet. The reader will be able to directly compare the 
performance of a total of 111 processors and analyze them relying 
on 3,330 benchmark values in various testing categories. Above all, 
users who entertain the idea of replacing their old PC system with 
a new one will see exactly what kind of performance increase they 
can expect in practice. This is possible - even though over the 
years the PC's architecture has been transformed with respect to 
memory, chipset and platform - because we did all of our benchmark 
tests using WindowsXP. 

http://www.tomshardware.com/cpu/20041220/index.html

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