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mas

01/08/04 5:17 PM

#22373 RE: Elmer Phud #22368

Gaming benchmarks are what drive the home desktop market and you fully know that. In fact Intel is as good as toast in the
gaming arena for the forseeable future, say 2 years.
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yourbankruptcy

01/08/04 5:18 PM

#22374 RE: Elmer Phud #22368

Elmer, it would be very interesting to know how many clicks the tomshardware.com and anandtech.com get when they publish a new benchmark set. This number will be directly related to the importance of blasting mutant aliens.

I suspect that this number should be around 5 million.

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j3pflynn

01/08/04 6:54 PM

#22402 RE: Elmer Phud #22368

EP - why would you consider info re: gaming benchmarks a waste of bandwidth? Gaming is an important segment of the market, and influentially, probably considerably more important than some other segments, it also provides an opportunity for higher margins and it's growing quite rapidly.
It's certainly not the most important data, but it's far from irrelevant.
Paul
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blauboad

01/08/04 7:52 PM

#22415 RE: Elmer Phud #22368

I can't take people seriously either who waste bandwidth here about gaming benchmarks.

I seem to have forgotten. At which segment of the market was the P4EE aimed?
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subzero

01/08/04 9:27 PM

#22434 RE: Elmer Phud #22368

"Why can't you stop with the mutant alien thing?"

AMD fanboys now have a new Mantra:

"By going to 64 bits, these games will be far more realistic, because more complex graphics will be possible. "Now you will be able to blow a hole in the ground and use it as a fox hole," Morris said. "

So AMDroids can whine on and on about "blowing a hole in the ground and use it as a fox hole" - one heckuva thing to do with the power of 64 bits.

AMD, Intel put antivirus tech into chips

By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
http://news.com.com/2100-7355-5137832.html

Story last modified January 8, 2004, 3:22 PM PST

LAS VEGAS--Advanced Micro Devices and Intel plan to soon release technology that will allow processors to stop many attacks before they occur.

Execution Protection by AMD, technology contained in AMD's Athlon 64 chips, prevents a buffer overflow, a common method used to attack computers. A buffer overflow essentially overwhelms a computer's defense systems and then inserts a malicious program in memory that the processor subsequently executes.

With Execution Protection, data in the buffer can only be read and, therefore, is prevented from doing its dirty work, John Morris, director of marketing at AMD, said in an interview Thursday at the Consumer Electronics Show here.







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"Now in current processors, any programs that go into the memory overflow can be executed," he said. "With this, the system only allows read-only in the buffer. It will not execute." The malicious program is then disposed harmlessly when the PC is turned off, he said.

The circuitry is already inside existing Athlon 64 chips, but it can't be activated yet. That will occur when Microsoft releases Service Pack 2 for Windows XP early in the second quarter. By then, AMD also will have a catchy marketing name for the technology, Morris said.

Intel is putting a similar technology in Prescott, an enhanced version of the Pentium 4 expected next month, according to computer manufacturers. Intel declined to comment.

Security problems, of course, have become a multibillion-dollar problem and show few signs of abating. These sorts of technologies could undercut one of the more severe headaches out there, Morris said.

A number of damaging worms from last year relied on buffer overflows. Around 50 percent of the Windows security updates from Microsoft in the last two years may have been rendered unnecessary if the technology existed then, according to an analysis by AMD and Microsoft.

Morris said the first full-fledged 64-bit programs for the Athlon 64 will appear this quarter. Ubisoft is slated to release a 64-bit version of "Far Cry" in March, while Epic Games will release a 64-bit version of "Unreal Tournament" in the first quarter.

By going to 64 bits, these games will be far more realistic, because more complex graphics will be possible. "Now you will be able to blow a hole in the ground and use it as a fox hole," Morris said.