The 3400+ compares very well to the much higher-priced Athlon64 FX51 in Multimedia Content Creation and Office (General Usage) Benchmarks. With the 2004 version of Winstones and the Athlon64 family processors, we no longer see the Intel domination of Content Creation tests, while AMD leads Office Winstone. Across the board, the Athlon64 processors, 3000+ to FX51, outperform the 3.2GHz Pentium 4 in both benchmarks. The P4EE falls between the 3200+ and 3000+ in Multimedia Winstone 2004, with all 3 processors very close in performance, but the 3400+ and FX51 are still the best performers. All the Athlon64 chips outperform the top Pentium chips in Office Winstone 2004. Keep in mind that the 3.2GHz Pentium 4 EE is more than twice the price of the 3400+, while the 3.2GHz P4 is in the same price range as the 3400+.
Those who were hoping that the new 3400+ would perform like a FX51 will be pleased to see that it is exactly what we find in these two "real application" benchmarks. The FX51 is on top by a small margin in these benchmarks, but the Dual-Channel architecture does not appear to matter very much in the performance of the internet, creating multimedia content, editing pictures, creating presentations, word-processing, spreadsheets, and the other common things we do with our computers.
Since Multimedia Content Creation Winstone 2004 also includes media encoding tests as part of the benchmark, we were surprised to see that the Athlon64 processors perform so well when Intel Pentium 4 chips are usually the faster chips in pure Media Encoding.
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atlr - Thursday, January 22, 2004 - link
Anyone seen any performance comparisons of 32-bit versus 64-bit versions of software and o/s on the A64?milehigh - Tuesday, January 20, 2004 - link
I'd like to 2nd #13's reply to include some older CPU's in these reviews. I've got a Barton 2500+ and seeing how it stacks up can help in not only help in upgrade decisions but I think it can help illustrate just how much faster these new CPU's are...KingofFah - Thursday, January 15, 2004 - link
I would be careful with most 350's, but, like #15 said, most FSP's (no matter which brand is relabeled on it) are marked much lower than what they are capable of doing. THG did a psu round up a while back showing that the FSP-300 was really capable of being completely stable at 390W consumption and the 350 (of which I am a owner) was capable being completely stable at 454W. I have not seen a review of the FSP-400 yet, but I am sure it follows the same trend as its predecessors. Most PSU's run very little over (or even under if it is a cheap one) their specified values, but Sparkle goes well over them.TrogdorJW - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
As for dropping Quake 3, how about checking out this, first:http://speedycpu.dyndns.org/opt/
I've read (from X-bit Labs) that the optimized DLLs boost Athlon XP/64 performance by 13 to 18 percent. Wow!
See:
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/athlo...
One last word of caution, though, is that if the DLLs in question are binary compiled as opposed to interpreted code, then id software's Jon Carmack says they are more open for cheats. In addition, there is the fact that a binary compiled DLL is already said to boost performance by up to 20%. Not sure about all this, but here's a last link if you want:
http://techreport.com/onearticle.x/336
TrogdorJW - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
#15, as the review states, they could not get system stability with a 350W quality power supply and the 3400+. Maybe you have a better PS than their 350W, but I wouldn't count on that.There are those that claim the Prescott will be a flame-thrower. Maybe. What we know for sure, though, is that the 3400+ has raised the bar in power requirements. Looks like 450W PS will become the norm in the next year....
sprockkets - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
You can't go wrong with a 350 watt FSP-350PN power supply, from either Sparkle or Forton Power Source, with it's 12cm fan. Works fine for my system I built with a 3200+ and gf4 4600, soon to be 9800 ATI card.rms - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
Congrats on the great article. Please STOP USING QUAKE3-BASED GAMES AS A CPU BENCHMARK. It doesn't recognize athlons as SSE-enabled, and is worthless for cross-platform comparisons.rms
clv101 - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
What I'd really like to see in reviews like this are some slower systems - I'm fed up with seeing graphs showing 6 cpu with only a few % performance difference.I'd like the see the A64 3400+ and P4 3.2 benchmarked against a XP 2500+, a 2.4GHz P4 and my old 1.33GHz TBird. That would be useful to see.
Seeing that the A64 3400+ is a little bit faster than a A64 3200+ is no good to anyone!
Wesley Fink - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
PrinceGaz -You are correct, but I had to return the initial 655TX and just received the shipping version of the P4S800D-E the day we left for CES. So I did not have the board available for the full roundup.
I did run the P4EE through the 655TX to check benchmarks and it is faster by a small amount in almost every benchmark. However, it does not change any of the positioning or conclusions.
#10 - I could not find the list either, since it looks like AMD has stopped the PS list for the Athlon64 and replaced it with "Athlon64 Power Supply recommendations" which are just general guidelines. The best source of info on compatible PS then, will likely be Power Supply reviews by AnandTech and others.
PrinceGaz - Tuesday, January 13, 2004 - link
Its nice to have a clear comparison of how the A64 and A64FX compare with the top P4's including the P4EE.One question though, shouldn't an article which "tests the top CPU's from Intel and AMD on the top-performing motherboards that we have tested for each platform" use an SiS 655TX rather than Intel 875P mobo for the Intel chips when your own review last month found the 655TX to be faster than the 875P in every single test?