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AM3 comes /07; AM2 nur "Lückenbüßer" ?

PRRONTO 05.04.2006 8126 28
Anandtech

Zitat
Sadly, it looks like AMD's tradition of keeping socket changes to a bare minimum is about to take a cue from Intel. Not socket of the week, exacly, but more socket of the year, not ideal, but a decent compromise for functionality.

Zitat
Originally posted by: Geek.com

We've heard a few reports lately that AMD's follow-up to Socket AM2 will be called Socket AM3. We hadn't seen a definitive posting yet, so we haven't mentioned it. Today, however, The Inquirer's Charlie Demerjian has posted an article citing sources saying that Socket AM3 will support DDR3. It will be the successor to Socket AM2, though there's no word on when it will be available.

In addition to upcoming products using Socket AM3, there will be some numbering changes to AMD processor identification parts. Opterons are currently available in x85 flavors (such as 185, 285, and 885), which means that AMD can't go too much further (190 and 195) before it breaks the numbering convention. This means that a changing of the numbering guard is nearly at hand (I think AMD should move to hexadecimal, but that's just me).

AMD's future products are a little difficult to come by directly from the source. Most of the enthusiast community's information comes from leaked documents stemming from AMD's partners. And, knowing The Inquirer as I do, it is likely that occasionally a piece gets through that wasn't quite leaked in context or even properly. I've often wondered how often companies will leak specific documents or specs to only a specific manufacturer to see where that information comes from, such as saying "1.84 volts" on this manufacturer's product sheet, "1.85 volts" on another, and "1.86 volts" on a third, just to see which number appears on some websites.

For now we'll have to rely on this sometimes unreliable news. Socket AM2 is a definite go, and Socket AM3 is the likely follow-up and should not come too late in the game. AMD is reportedly able to release K8L on 90 nm if it has to, but it's waiting for 65 nm to allow it to really shine. We'll see virtualization and security features with Socket AM2 products, allowing a more rounded and comprehensive computing experience. And with AMD's licensing of Z-RAM we could be seeing some major caching architecture changes in future AMD products.
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