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FPSLabs Home: The Conroe Family Tree

By: Christian Koebel - Published March 25, 2006 at 6:05 PM EST - Writer Archive
When news came out of this Spring's IDF that Intel's new "Conroe" processor took on and demolished AMD's top FX-60, the entire hardware community went abuzz. We take a look at where this super-microprocessor came from.


Conroe, Conroe, Conroe. Since the spring Intel Developer Forum (IDF), that is all we've heard people talking about when the conversation turns to CPUs. But what do you really know about the Conroe core? What is it's underlying microarchitecture? What is a microarchitecture, for that matter? How did Intel come up with this one? This article will help you answer those questions. The third question is the easiest to answer. A microarchitecture, commonly called a 'marchitecture', is a basic design that processors for that generation will use when their respective cores are designed. It's like a mother-core. For example, the mother of the Prescott, Presler, Northwood, Prestonia, Willamette, and Nocona cores is NetBurst. A marchitecture is not easy to design and AMD and Intel create a new one only once ever couple of years. The name of the marchitecture that Intel is using to create Conroe is called Intel Core Microarchitecture, or ICM. It will be the first new marchitecture since the Pentium III was replaced by the Pentium 4. Too see how ICM started out, it's time to take a trip back in time. Hang on!

The year is 2003. AMD as just released their cutting-edge Athlon 64 chips with a whole new marchitecture, dubbed “K8”. It is received to rave reviews, and even Intel's monstrous PR machine can't keep consumers from buying stores out of stock. Deep inside Intel's HQ, the best and brightest are coming to a realization: They're in trouble. They've seen first-hand what a first-generation Athlon 64 can do to their fully developed, top of the line Pentium 4 chips, and it isn't pretty. They also know that the next generation of Pentium 4 processors, currently codenamed Tejas and Jayhawk, are having serious heat trouble. If their researchers couldn't get those issues resolved, then they'd have to execute plan B: multiple cores. Fast forward to May, 2004, and plan B becomes a reality. Tejas and Jayhawk have been terminated, and single core development is effectively banned to a side project. Quickly into dual-core development it became apparent that the Pentium 4, between it's obtrusively long pipeline and it's high heat dissipation, was never meant to be a multiple-core chip. Finally, the heads realized the obvious: They had to start over from square one, designing an x86 marchitecture from the ground up that would be radically different from any ever seen before. It was to be called Intel Core Microarchitecture.

In order for Intel to design the ICM properly, they examined the advantages of shortcomings of both the Netburst (Pentium 4) core design and the P6 (Pentium III and Pentium M) cores. To create the ultimate processor to overthrow the power of AMD's chips, they needed the best of both worlds from these designs. So where, exactly, did that leave Intel? The answer to this question lies in looking at the same to marchitectures that they looked at, the P6 and NetBurst.

P6

The 80686 marchitecture, or P6 for short, was for the Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, and Pentium M processors. It's original use in the Pentium Pro was as a high-power enterprise alternative to the 80586-based processors, known as the original Pentium. Once the limits of the Pentium were realized, P6 hit prime time with the release of the Pentium II. The P6-era of desktop computing lasted 5 years until 2000, with the release of the Pentium 4. P6 has come back in recent years when it was discovered to be a viable alternative to the power-hungry Pentium 4.

The 80686 design is based on a 10-14 stage instruction pipeline. Using a pipeline of this length, the various different P6-based cores can achieve impressive efficiency per clock cycle, using a very low amount of power. This solution was ideal both in the past, when modern methods of increasing a CPU's power dissipation weren't available, and now, in situations where power is in limited supply, such as laptops. Additionally, the P6 was capable of incredible integer calculation scores, owing to it's multiple arithmetic logic units (ALU s) within the core itself.

On the other hand, the P6 was not without problems. For starters, it had horrendous floating-point scores, mainly due to the presence of only a single floating point unit (FPU) on the core. Another major disadvantage was the limit the marchitecture put on bus speeds. Even with the greatest P6 ever created, the dual-core Yonah, the front side bus speed is only 667MHz. This is over 100MHz shy of the 800MHz FSB that Pentium 4's achieved years ago. With such a small bus frequency, the bandwidth with the memory of a system was severely limited.

The P6 was a well made design, but it's crippling limitations kept it from being any sort of competition to the AMD K8. Some of it's more interesting features, however, were noted, and the researchers turned their eyes to their baby from only 5 years ago, the NetBurst.
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User Comments

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Nice article.
Steve Smith is Pro!
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CHYUH INTEL!!
Back to the intel bandwagon for me :).
sweet penance for the sound
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Has this piece already been published?
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lol #2
I've never used an AMD processor so I'll just shut up and say COOL.
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great article haha
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i want to see a side by side comparison of conroe and am2.
You know what I'd like to be? I mean if I had my choice, I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all.
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let's wait for the real tests....
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nice, good read
Antec Nine Hundred, Asus P5N32-E SLI 680i, Intel e6600, XFX 8800GTS, OCZ 2gigs 8500.
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Aye intel tests mean nothing and its there next generation processor against the current generation AMDs not the next gen which will appear about the same time although AMD have been better than Intel for years. Ill believe intel when i see the chips being tested by real enthusiats who'll push em to the limit against there closest competitors.
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#9, AMD's 2006 product line isn't quite "next gen." AMD is just tweaking/improving their previous architecture to produce less heat and support DDR2, where Intel is designing their architecture from square 1.
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10GHZ o_O! Great read I realy wanna see Intel become a better competitor for AMD. I also wanna compare their results to the future/current amd's
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nice read
I play CS on a toaster
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I hate when people argue about comparing "next-gen" stuff and what have you. If you wanted to argue semantics, you'd never be able to compare anything properly. Stop being ignorant.

As for the new Intel's, I can't wait. People always generally jump out and say AMD > Intel, Intel blows etc.. However, with the facts, as reiterated in the article, show that Intel when it first designed what it set out to do in the coming years, had never expected a rival of such magnitude. AMD came out of seemingly nowhere and threw a few wrenches in the gears and forced Intel to tweak a few things and realized they needed to start doing work again to get back in the game that they had ruled for so long.

All I can do is give props to Intel for at least surviving as long as they have. Now they are set to show exactly why they were at the top in the past. I also give props to AMD for all the work they have done to reshape their efforts and Intels in this market. Should be great, all this competition is gonna drive efficiency and speeds faster at decent prices, so it's all good.
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Wonder what AMD's response to this processor will be.

Good read, nice article!
anyone keeping track of my heads batted in?
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Seeing gotfrag linked from HardOCP is trippy.
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AMDs will still massacare, this Intel "competition" will only make AMDs cheaper, which is good I guess.
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Pentium pros were beasts. AMD's have always been nice but I always found it hard to swallowing knowing that a friend has a higher processing power (not to mention lower cache) when comparing AMD to Intel, so I bought an Intel for my last processor.
http://MEevent.com - Maine's Gaming Community
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#13 I hardly felt AMD came out of nowhere.

From what I can recall, Cyrex and AMD were both rivals to Intel during the mid to late 90's. The Pentium I and II were ahead of the AMD chips during that era, but AMD offered a much cheaper alternative. The AMD Atlhon was the first chip by AMD I felt equalled and surpassed the popular Intel chips offered and created the first ripples in the pool. Since then Intel, as the article mentioned, did try and spark a media "war" of chip frequencies, but quite a few people weren't duped. These people studied their market when buying processors and observed numerous benchmarks. These benchmarks verified that AMD had a superior chip even though the frequencies were noticably lower than the chips they outperformed.
I feel that strong marketing often denotes weakness. When a product is so good that it needs no marketing to sell well, that to me is a sign of strength or competence within the product.
What I am trying to convey is that Intel won the marketing war and hence the general public always considered Intel to be the better product. This can be substantiated by the amount of chips Intel sold vs AMD. The reality is AMD's top of the line chips run quicker, cooler, and more efficiently. Conroe hopes to change this, but I won't be holding my breath. From the looks of things though, Intel atleast has its sights in the right direction. Cooler, faster, and more efficient is definitely something we can also appreciate in a CPU.
Im just surprised more people aren't upset that they were conned by Intel into believing their stories of chip frequencies being the prime factor in processing power. Once I found out I never bought an Intel.

This comment was edited at 03/29/2006 1:50 PM
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athlon xp chips never matched the power of the p4 800FSB chips. however, they were certainly cheaper.
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#20 Never is such a strong word - but i see you specified the XP chips although im certain I never referenced XP. Also, out of curiousity, I hope you can elaborate on the term "power." I for one can see multiple interpretations so if you clarified that term for us maybe I can see how you came to that conclusion. I can whole-heartedly agree with you if you added the term "consumption" after the word "power."

Here's something I recently ran across - the reason I am providing this link is not to prove or disprove your statement. Just there for those interested in some newer data from a pretty reliable site.
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu.html

Correct me if I'm wrong but my memory seems to presume that the original Athlons introduced (to the general masses) the larger Front side bus (FSB) and larger L1 and L2 cache into the CPU architecture. Am I correct also in assuming the 800 mhtz FSB from Intel was the result of trying to match what already was on the market?

Btw, I am glad that this hardware section of gotfrag exists. One more view on the ever-changing world of technology can only help broaden our perspective of what is out there.

This comment was edited at 03/29/2006 4:17 PM
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nice review!
Antec Nine Hundred, Asus P5N32-E SLI 680i, Intel e6600, XFX 8800GTS, OCZ 2gigs 8500.
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so when does it come out?
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Intel is coming back babe
Pittsburgh Steelers 6 Times Superbowl Champions
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Say goodbye to duel core and netburst as we know it. Say hello to the new intel conroe architecture. Intel resently released a statement about there new series the Conroe along with a pricing guild. It seems that Intel will be releasing 4 new cpu's with this Conroe. The E6300, E6400, E6600, E6700. They also released the prices on each of these 4 new cpu's The E6700 the most powerfull processor of the bunch running at 2.66Ghz will be released at $530. The E6600 running at 2.40Ghz will be released at $316. The E6400 running at 2.13Ghz will be released at $244. and the E6300 running at a mear1.86Ghz will be released at $209. Dont get anything twisted here it does seem like low Ghz for such a hyped up new architecture. But don't worry Aandtech did bechmarks at the IDF Spring show with the Intel Conroe E6700 against the AMD Athlon 64 x2 FX-60 Overcloked to 2.8GHZ and benchmarks dont lie, in every graphics and encoding test done with the conroe came out on top by at least 11-30% everytime. With this new cpu release set due for April 30th you might as well throw the axe down on AMD even with amd's switch to the socket 940 and the introduction of there own AMD DDR2 for there newly socketed cpu's they dont have much of a chance.
KNVB
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AM2 will not stack up to Conroe it's just S939 with DDR2 support.

AMD will probably have an answer next year. Intel will be on top with Conroe for the rest of 2006.
C2D E6600 @ 3.2GHz|2GB DDR2 4-4-4-15|8800GTS 640MB 610/1900|Dell 2407WFP LCD|Antec P182B|1TB HDD
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E6600 > FX62, and $1000 cheaper.

I'm so tempted to build a conroe system on release day, damnnnnn
« [b][i]it's all a blur of dancehall hips[/i][/b] » || '05 - 13,906 || '06 - 8,500 ||
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Nice article, very well written.
[b]GotFrag Features Writer[/b]

Nice article, very well written.

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