Advanced Micro Devices
on Thursday announced new Phenom chips, including quad-core chips and its first
triple-core processors for desktop PCs.
The company's triple-core Phenom X3 8000 series processors provide an option
to mainstream PC buyers who don't want to spend on a quad-core processor but
are looking for more performance than a dual-core processor, said Pat Moorhead,
vice president of advanced marketing at AMD.
The chips could be used for high-definition video playback, casual mainstream
gaming and productivity applications, Moorhead said.
The company's first triple-core processors include the Phenom X3 8400, which
runs at 2.1GHz, and the Phenom X3 8600, which runs at 2.3GHz. Both will come
with 1.5M bytes of L2 cache and 2M bytes of L3 cache.
AMD also launched three Phenom quad-core processors on Thursday -- the Phenom
X4 9750, which runs at 2.4Ghz; the Phenom X4 9850, which runs at 2.5GHz; and
the Phenom 9100e, a low-voltage quad-core processor that runs at 1.8GHz and
has a 65-watt power envelope during maximum usage. All the processors contain
2M bytes of L2 cache and 2M bytes of L3 cache.
PC makers will ship products with the quad-core processors in the second quarter,
AMD said.
The triple-core processors are already shipping in volume to PC makers, AMD
said. U.S. vendor ZT Systems will list PCs with the new triple-core Phenoms
on Monday, with other "major OEMs" and system vendors shipping products
next quarter, AMD said. Many major vendors, including Dell and Hewlett-Packard,
have already hinted at including the processors in desktops.
Dell has listed
plans to use the chip in its OptiPlex 740 business desktop systems. It will
ship the triple-core OptiPlex in the second quarter, a company spokeswoman recently
said, but she declined to specify which processor will run the desktop. Hewlett-Packard
has also listed
a desktop on its Bulgarian-language Web site with AMD's Phenom Triple-Core
8600B processor.
Mesh Computer, a PC vendor in the U.K., is offering the Matrix
XXX Plus desktop with the Phenom X3 8400 processor and the Matrix
XXX Pro desktop with the Phenom 8600 processor.
Because the triple-core chip is a new concept--set between the widely accepted
dual- and quad-cores--it's unclear how it will fit in the market, said Dean
McCarron, founder and principal at Mercury Research.
"You're going to get a performance enhancement with the extra core above
and beyond a dual-core," McCarron said. But it also falls shy of a quad-core.
AMD designed the triple-core as a way to produce a cheaper chip. The triple-core
processor is built on a quad-core CPU, with one core nonfunctional, McCarron
said.
The triple-core chip gives AMD a tactical advantage over Intel, McCarron said.
Intel will need to answer the triple-core chip with a product priced in the
same range while delivering similar performance. Intel can take a dual-core
or quad-core processor, adjust features like cache, and price it similar to
AMD's triple-core processor, McCarron said.