Ten Lies About Microprocessors 59
cloudkj writes "Processor selection too often turns into a religious war. Debunking the dominant myths is the first step towards making a rational choice. Embedded.com has an article highlighting the 10 most common lies and misconceptions about microprocessors."
GHZ is meaningless? Of course it is (Score:2, Insightful)
"PPC by design handles better than x86. The Ghz is meaningless."
Except that it is one of the ways that x86 way outperforms the PPC. PPC is so far behind; the speeds of the current ones were "state of the art" for x86 back in 2001: downright languid.
Yes, actual performance does not matter. That is one of Apple's main marketing messages when marketing machines with sluggish processors in them to try and fool buyers into thinking it does not matter at all.
Re:GHZ is meaningless? Of course it is (Score:2)
Ghz is not performance. Case in point: the VIA C3 chip is nothing but a 733Mhz 486. You're going to tell me a Celeron 600Mhz is slower?
Similarly a G4 1.2 Ghz can run circles around a P4 1.2 Ghz.
Re:GHZ is meaningless? Of course it is (Score:3, Interesting)
Careful, you'll piss off the karma-sucking Apple zealots, a scary and VERY defensive group.
Anyway, right at the moment, it looks like Apple does actually have the fastest desktop-class machine on the market (at 5x the cost of an Athlon pulling 90% of that performance, of course). However, in typic
Re:rather pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm, I believe this assumption is not a good one. Lots of people working in embedded systems believe some of these myths. This article is aimed at making sure everyone in the field is aware of these pitfalls. For example, I've seen lots of CPU selector charts specify Dhyrstone MIPS to indicate CPU horsepower.
K.
Re:rather pointless (Score:2)
Otherwise of course, it means nothing!
Re:Very interesting article. (Score:1, Funny)
number 1 lie: bridges (Score:1)
Re:number 1 lie: bridges (Score:2)
INTEL Clarification (Score:3, Interesting)
Those of us who only use desktop machines have a hard time seeing past Intel/AMD/Motorola. Let's face it: the next processor decision I'm going to make is going to be whether I want to stick with AMD or go to Intel for my next gaming machine.
Re:INTEL Clarification (Score:2)
Re:INTEL Clarification (Score:2, Interesting)
Top 10 Lies about Microprocessors (Score:5, Funny)
9. Intel from Mars, PPC from Venus
8. No, Porky Pig did not give the PPC its name when he tried to say "PC".
7. Celeron was not named after Celery
6. Go ahead, you can buy a Pentium 3 without worrying that the Blue Man Group will knock on your door and bore you to tears with their post-modern Bolian-hued Mummenschanz [mummenschanz.com] antics.
5. "It's a chip, does this mean I can eat it if I dip it in bean dip?"
4. "I paid $2,000 for this screamer back in 1987. It will blow the socks off anything you will put up against it"
3. "Mine's bigger than yours"
2. "Intel Inside"? Consider that label to be a warning.
1. "Get me a microscope. I'm going to open up my PC and look at my micro-processor.
Re:Top 10 Lies about Microprocessors (Score:3, Funny)
Speaking of celery, one of the funniest lines in the book "Ultimate Rush" was when one hacker says to a Fed about another hacker, "He couldn't hack celery with a machete!"...
Heres my top ten (Score:5, Funny)
2. I am perfectly happy with the one I have.
3. Having a faster CPU would make me more productive.
4. I bought the cheapest one because I want to support the underdog.
5. Noisy CPU fans don't really bother me.
6. If I get the most expensive one, I won't have to upgrade for a long time.
7. My life is so much better now that I have CPU x.
8. I don't envy you your brand new CPU, because mine has a years long proven track record.
9. Nobody will ever need a 64bit CPU for home use.
10. I only read newsgroups for the articles.
Huh? (Score:1)
Microprocessors are now sold like perfume: the price on the label has no connection to the cost of the ingredients. It's tempting to assume some meaningful relationship between cost and price. Save your time--there isn't one.
I'm trying to find a meaningful relationship between the topic and that line of argument but don't think there is one.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with that argument:
It's not terribly clear because he omitted a step from the argument, but I suppose otherwise the title for that section would be too long and unwieldy.
Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:5, Insightful)
I would say:
#3. The clock speed is a good estimate for processor performance
They implied it here, but even in this world today, there are competent people that think clock speed actually matters when comparing one processor over another. I had an IT person who controls a pretty big budget actually compare a processor in a 8way Sun server to a 21264 alpha chip using only the magnitude of the clock speed as the only performance benchmark. As most (should) know, clock speed works for ranking processors within a family, but mean very, very little in the real world. It's obvious, but as long as purchasers think this is true bad decisions are being made...
-Sean
Re:Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:1)
Re:Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:2)
Re:Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:2)
Embeded systems ofter are much simpler.
When it comes to embeded systems you need a chip that is fast enough. You are not worred that you will have to run Doom3 on your latest wi
Re:Missed the biggest one of all... (Score:2)
Of course there are: Intel think it matters, and AMD think it doesn't. ;-)
Interesting, but one nitpick (Score:4, Informative)
Chris
Good read (Score:4, Insightful)
Some of Slashdot's trolls would do well to pay attention to the cynical wit present in that statement. Overall though it's a very well-written, concise, and informative article. I'll be quoting his statement on MIPS next time a cpu discussion comes up.
Re:Good read (Score:1)
No, it's one lemon and... (Score:2)
* One lemon (or any compatible citrus fruit)
* A chunk of copper
* A chunk of zinc
If I remember my daughter's 4th grade science experiment correctly, I'll need about a half dozen in series to run my Palm III.
Of course, I wondered how the lemon (and the orange, and the potato) would *taste* after the electrical potential had been depleted... and what would happen if I tried to recharge the "batt
Not all Micrprocessor are reliable as each other (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is this, it is fine having the latest technology fitted in the a piece of equipment. However, if you expect that piece of equipment to be operational for an extended number of years, don't select the most powerful processor avialable. Fit one that is reliable and is likely to still be in production for the foreseable future.
Ahh, some of you would say, surely you can emulate an old microprocessor in the future if you need to. Good premise, but if you are building for an application that is incorporated into a safety device on an aircraft or even a car, you will spend an absolute fortune re-qualifing the replacement software. An if you are only building a a few units for spares, it is one easy way of going bunkrupt.
and this is before I start talking about whether the microprocessor will operate in the temperature, vibration environment and the effects of atmospheric radiation at altitude.
Working outside the PC industry, there is a lot more to consider than you would think....
Plusser
Great article (Score:2, Interesting)
-1, Troll (Score:4, Insightful)
The author seems to enjoy dispelling myths but, in this and one of his other articles (RISCy Business) that he links to, he seems to cling rather stubbornly to a couple of his own. For example, I just read twice about how "some RISC chips" don't have multiplication instructions, even though most do nowadays. But hey, it's a convenient club to bash with, just like the one about code density. The guy's a troll. He hates RISC for some reason, and perhaps he has some good points to justify that dislike in the embedded space, but in his zeal he just goes too far into exaggeration and misrepresentation. He also needs to read H&P to understand the real rationale behind RISC, instead of the strawman rationale he gives in the article.
Re:-1, Troll (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:-1, Troll (Score:2)
Re:-1, Troll ?? (Score:1)
I just read twice about how "some RISC chips" don't have multiplication instructions, even though most do nowadays
Well, it might just be me but when "most do", some don't. You're basically saying that he's right, and should be modded down for it?
I'll grant that there might be a negative slant towards RISC in this article, but trolling? Nah.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
I was surprised about one (Score:2)
ARM is the middle of the pack in efficiency? I didnt know that. I'm basing my designs on ARM for the reason of its power consumption/performance and its die size (core is 3mm^2 !!). That was the reason I bypassed PPC MIPS and the rest, because theyve always been big powerful chips not suitable for an mp3 player running on 2 AA batteries, but of course I never had the time or motivation to pull out datasheets and compare the numbers for these architectures.
Does anyone know of the lowest power consuming 32
Re:No surprises, really... (Score:2)
But This Goes Up To 11 (Score:2, Interesting)
This goes to show you what (even educated) people think because of TV/marketing. The CPU is the 'brains' & mark of a computer, Intel chips are the fastest,
Thermodynamics (Score:3, Insightful)
the wee ARM6 consumed less total energy than the others gave off as heat.
-1 Redundant
Re:Thermodynamics (Score:2)
Let's say, an ARM processor consumes x Watts.
Others consume y Watts.
Now, a significant percent of the consumed energy will be dissipated as heat. In the case of others, it would be in the order of (0.4 y) to (0.5 y) (I'm being conservative).
What the statement says, is that x (0.4 y). Which, of course, means x y.
Re:Thermodynamics (Score:2)
Sorry, all consumed energy will become heat (and will be radiated as heat).
The wattage consumption of a solid-state device is equal to its heat output (or heat+light output, in the case of an LED or lightbulb or CRT, but light becomes heat too).
Of course, you may have some of the electricity going to memory writes or something, but eventually, it all becomes heat.
10 150W lightbulbs (in a closed room with no windows for the