If you were wondering just how fast Intel can clock its next-generation 45nm
Nehalem processors, there's your answer. At the ongoing Intel Development Forum
in Shanghai, China,
Hexus and
HWUpgrade have caught a couple of photos of a PC running with a quad-core
Bloomfield chip-the desktop flavor of Nehalem-clocked at a whopping 3.2GHz.
Hexus reports the demo system was computing a dynamic airflow simulation, and
shots of the machine's display suggest it was running Autodesk's heavy-duty 3D
modeling software suite Maya. A shot of the Windows XP Device Manager also
confirms the aforementioned clock speed: the Processors tree lists eight
"Genuine Intel CPU" entries with an "@ 3.20GHz" next to each of them. This isn't
an eight-core CPU, though-the four extra cores are simply the work of Nehalem's
simultaneous multi-threading implementation, which should work similarly to the
Hyper-Threading feature of old Pentium 4s and Pentium Extreme Editions.
According to a recent press briefing by Intel's Pat Gelsinger, Nehalem chips
will feature 256KB of L2 cache per core, 8MB of L3 cache per chip, and an
integrated memory controller with support for up to three DDR3-1333 channels.
Nehalem CPUs will also feature a number of architectural enhancements that
should make them speedier, clock-for-clock, than current Core 2 offerings. The
first Nehalem CPUs are scheduled to ship in the fourth quarter, but the rumor
mill suggests
the chips won't hit mainstream desktops until 2009.