Actually, my point of view is somewhat different. After having perused the pack of Phenom reviews circulated today, I can't think of a time when I've been more disappointed with the lack of thought and clarity in the reviews I've read today for the Phenom/Spider product introductions.
That's too bad, since AMD controlled most of the vague and unclear reviews.
Coincidence?
Every single one of the reviews I've read so far base their core assumptions (pardon the pun) on various benchmarks compiled and optimized primarily to run on Intel cpus.
Then it's business as usual.
That in itself isn't so bad, since Phenom is only today coming out of the starting gate and only now beginning to ship. So naturally, things like compilers and optimizations specific to Spider platforms in general, not to mention motherboard bioses for these brand new AMD core logic chipsets, are currently under development--which means they're being debugged and optimized even as we speak.
That should tell you something.
The product is days away from supposedly shipping in quantity, and the platform is in shambles.
It's a repeat of the Athlon days when Intel pressured motherboard makers to not make Slot A motherboards.
Only this time, the board makers would kill to make an AMD board, only AMD's failed execution has stopped them.
There is no way in hell that a final product that is shipping for real money should be in that position.
Opteron and A64 had running boards and near full-speed processors months prior to launch.
Phenom's status--as a product people pay real money for--is unacceptable, and the fact that AMD and partners are going through with it is indicative of desperation.
Let's not forget that the lousy chipset situation and motherboard issues really hurt AMD's gains with K7.
What's so disappointing is the lack of recognition of any of these factors--factors which affect all system introductions--not by any means only AMD systems. The people writing the reviews I've read so far seem almost gleefully oblivious to the ins and outs of all product development and how those in and outs might specifically be affecting the Phenom introduction at this precise point in time. Basically, if the Phenom/Spider/790 product introductions follow the same pattern as all previous Athlon and Intel product introductions, things are going to improve very quickly over the next few months, and improve dramatically.
No, Phenom's status is significantly worse.
There are questions about stability and functionality days prior to launch.
How often have either Intel or AMD ever admitted that there is a critical show-stopping crash bug that basically limits CPU clock speed to less than the top bin of chips from two process generations before?
But this seems to be something today's (as in today, literally) crop of reviews simply think is utterly unimportant. Even so, this by no means keeps many of them from making grand predictions of doom & gloom for AMD--based merely on the running of literally a *handful* of Intel/and-or-nVidia-compiled and intel/and-or-nVidia-optimized benchmarks. Sandra, in particular, has always heavily tilted toward Intel product support, and obviously something in Sandra isn't quite reading the Phenom right with respect to cpu memory bandwidth--and probably lots of other things, too. Yet, most of the reviews I've read today proclaim that Phenom's bandwidth is half what the A64's was simply because that's what the current version of Sandra tells them. Yes, where would some of these "reviewers" be without canned benchmarks like Sandra to guide them along to the conclusions that the parties behind Sandra, parties hidden from view, wish them to reach?...
Kind of a frightening thought--but there it is.
Memory results on a number of programs (including AMD's) do not correctly detect the memory controllers.
That being said, AMD's greatest success didn't come when its products ran AMD-optimized software best.
Remember K7 vs P3 and K8 vs. P4?
AMD made money by making processors that beat Intel at its own game.
They ran Intel code better than Intel did.
Now, AMD is having a hard time making a chip that beats K8 in some situations.
I guess we should blame Sandra for being K8-centric.
So, you might want to think about what the term "actual results" really means...
Point is, today's "actual results" may not mirror the "actual results" even a month from now, let alone 3-6 months from now.
Just how long from now is "too late"?
Let's decide on a date, and we'll mark it on our calendars.
When that date comes to pass, we can all get together and then we can discuss things over tea.
Phenom has been released in 4Q 2007, with a top bin half a GHz below the originally planned speed on a motherboard a revision back from what it should have been.
It has chips that cannot be trusted to overclock, because even if they did clock high, they'd freeze the system.
I've seen exactly that scenario unfold many times in the past, and I surely have a hard time believing I'm the only one. That's why my greatest difficulty at the present time is talking myself *out* of a Phenom-based system in the next few months.
I'm sure the one Phenom AMD manages to build in the next quarter will be there for you to buy.
Possibly it's hard for me because even now at the moment running my Athlon x2 4200/HD2600 XT 512/ Asus A8n5x/22" LCD system I'm having no difficulty running the latest games at smooth and fluid framerates and enjoying them without difficulty--despite the fact that this or that hardware reviewer keeps trying to tell me that if I'm not running all my games at 1900x1200 or higher then I'm not really gaming, if you know what I mean...
So AMD's latest and greatest can't even trump its old value lines?
Sounds fantastic.
Right now, I see nothing to dissuade me from buying some version of a "Spider" system in the next few months, probably one I'll put together myself rather than a bog-standard OEM version, and the fact that current benchmarks do nothing to flatter Phenom isn't of any concern to me. At this point in time I simply would not expect them to, as for the past year they've been refined with Intel optimizations in mind--nothing sinister or underhanded about that at all, because Core 2's been shipping all that time while Phenom has not.
I'm sure Phenom-optimized programs will come out.
Going by the current crop, the primary optimizations will be to downclock the chip to 2.3 GHz and only run on one core.
Either that or enable the hidden time machine to bring the Phenom release up 6 months, or do you really think (edit: not) beating a (edit: lower bin of) chip that is been out for over a year a staggering accomplishment?
So If I buy a Phenom system in the next few months it will be because of lots of things beside canned benchmark frame-rates that few of today's reviewer's have bothered to write about, let alone think about, it seems to me. And, if I can get 80% of the performance of the highest-end Core2 shipping at the time I buy, and pay 30%-50% of that Core 2 platform's cost while doing so, then I'm going to consider myself and Phenom to be big winners...
You might be a winner by buying an overly large and underperforming die at fire sale prices.
However, what makes WaltC a winner is not the same thing that makes Phenom a winner.
I'm also somewhat unsure as to where that 30-50% factor is coming in.
Seriously, I haven't seen anything to indicate that a decent motherboard and processor from either platform has that large a disparity.
Basically, I think that today's reviewers who have concluded that the contest between Phenom and Core 2 is over and done with have failed to apprehend that that particular contest is, in fact, only just beginning. I would have thought that today, on the day of Phenom's launch, that nothing could be more obvious.
The contest they're declaring over right now is Phenom versus 65nm Core2.
And given Intel's schedule for production, they're pretty much right.