AMD is planning
to add a triple-core desktop processor to its current dual-core and forthcoming
quad-core desktop processor line.
The triple-core processor features the same design as the quad-core model,
and both are based on the
Phenom
architecture scheduled to ship in the first quarter of 2008.
Intel is
currently the only chip maker offering quad-core desktop processors, and has
made no public mention of plans to ship a triple-core processor.
An Intel spokesperson declined to comment on whether the firm was preparing
such a product.
AMD argues that triple-core processors are appealing because their quad-core
peers are too powerful for the average desktop. Market share data indicates that
quad-core processors have captured less than two per cent of the desktop market.
"Our native multi-core design will deliver a more seamless array of products,
serving a broader swathe of the market," Bob Brewer, AMD's corporate vice
president for marketing and strategy, said during a meeting with reporters in
San Francisco.
An alternative explanation to the limited demand for quad-core processors
could be Intel's pricing.
The firm currently prices the chips at a significant premium over dual-core
models, although prices have dropped rapidly in recent months.
But AMD still maintains that the average user will not derive much benefit
from four cores, because most of today's software is designed for execution on a
single thread or processor core.
The few exceptions, mostly games, will often use a maximum of two cores.
While a security scan from antivirus software can take up a third process, the
fourth core will typically sit idle.
A triple-core chip would also be smaller, decreasing the chance of defects
during manufacturing. The resulting increase in chip yields will boost revenues.
AMD declined to address pricing or clock speeds for its triple-core and
quad-core processors.
Nathan Brookwood, an analyst with
Insight
64, suggested that reducing the number of cores could allow AMD to run its
desktop processors at higher clock frequencies.
Desktop processors are typically designed to consume no more than 120W. A
core reduction frees up capacity for the three remaining cores, and Brookwood
estimated that this could result in a 10 to 15 per cent overall performance
boost.
Because most software is designed for single-core processors, three faster
cores could outpace four slower ones in real-world applications.
"If AMD can make a triple-core that runs at a substantially higher clock
frequency, that is going to a be really fascinating trade-off," said Brookwood.
Comments
Have your say on this article