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MacSrvant21

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 16, 2006
17
0
:) Obviously, the new 667mhz FSB on the intel chip is a lot faster...But does this mean more chances of the "bottleneck" effect??? :)
 

TLRedhawke

macrumors 6502
Sep 17, 2004
351
0
I find the FSB isn't all that good an indicator as far as overall performance goes. AMD chips with an FSB of 266 performed much faster than Intel chips with an FSB of 600 or so. Yes, an FSB of 667 compared to 167 is pretty significant, but the use of an Intel chipset may all but eliminate any benefit that that brings.
 

mkrishnan

Moderator emeritus
Jan 9, 2004
29,776
15
Grand Rapids, MI, USA
MacSrvant21 said:
:) Obviously, the new 667mhz FSB on the intel chip is a lot faster...But does this mean more chances of the "bottleneck" effect??? :)

Can you explain what you mean? Usually, when people say bottleneck, they mean that one component of the pathway is much slower, or allows through less data, than the rest of the pathway. And so that component sets the pace of the whole system. In this case, the FSB speed is closer to the processor speed, so there's less chance of it being a bottleneck. Then again, if I understand correctly, minimizing this effect is the whole reason you have a cache on the other side of the bus....
 
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