Original URL: 
http://www.reghardware.co.uk/2006/01/23/intel_macs_25pc_faster/
Intel Macs only one fourth, not four times faster - report
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Published Monday 23rd January 2006 19:41 GMT

Comment Don't say we didn't warn you. But when the world's last great
computer company decided to tie its fortunes to the world's slowest chip
company, the reality was never going to match the hype.

Macworld has gotten hold of the x86 iMacs and run some benchmarks
(http://www.macworld.com/2006/01/features/imaclabtest1/index.php). There's
lots of good news for speed-starved Mac users. The iMac boots in 25 seconds,
and shaves the time taken to perform some mathematically-intensive tasks by
a third.

But on the whole, the results show a speed bump of only a measly quarter
over today's overclocked G4 and new G5 processors.

"Unfortunately, our tests suggest that the remarkable results of Apple's
published tests aren't reflected in most of the real-world applications we
tested. Based on our initial tests, the new Core-Duo-based iMac seems to be
10-20 per cent faster than its predecessor when it comes to native
applications, with some select tasks showing improvement above and beyond
that," writes Macworld's Jason Snell.

So at this stage, the empirical evidence suggests quite a different story to
the "4x" improvement over the G5 projected by the reality distortion field
of Apple CEO Steve Jobs, and quoted in Apple literature. Apple quotes a 2x
improvement for x86 Macs over their G5 predecessors. And yet it's barely 25
per cent.

Under the Rosetta emulation - a British invention from Manchester - PPC
applications running in x86 performed at about half speed. With the
exception of iTunes, which encoded audio files a third as fast as it would
have done running on a decent processor, such as the IBM G5.

So what can we conclude from this?

Well, it's worth examining what Apple really wants from a move to Intel. If
we look hard, then "better performance per watt" or even simply "better
performance" doesn't make for the most convincing explanation.

Only once in the past two decades has Intel been able to claim the
performance crown, very briefly in late 1995 when its Pentium Pro knocked
DEC's Alpha chip off the top of the benchmarks. On desktop performance
alone, Intel has been bested for several years by AMD's far more competitive
Athlon chip. Intel's next generation 64-bit processor Itanium is a billion
dollar dud, and it failed to crank much advantage out of the deep-pipelined
Pentium 4, which always ran hotter, and more inefficiently, than generations
of Athlon or RISC processors. So last year Intel finally tore up its
roadmaps, abandoning its Athlon-killer P7 core for future desktops, and
leaving us to look forward to derivatives of third-generation mobile chips.
These will be powering Microsoft PCs - and now Apple computers, too - for
the next few years.

When Microsoft chose a next-generation chip for its Xbox 360 console -
something expected to have a life of five years - it chose a dual-core
PowerPC processor, the platform Apple was abandoning.

For all his legendary power of persuasion, Jobs doesn't seem to have much
luck with microprocessor suppliers. He failed to persuade Motorola to invest
in the G4 and failed to persuade IBM to provide competitive chips for Apple,
although IBM has been able to pull a rabbit out of the hat for Microsoft,
and an alliance with Sony and IBM for Cell-based hardware should be a potent
combination.

So Intel makes a lot of chips, but they're never the best. Tell us something
new, you're thinking.

Why did Apple move to Intel, then, really?

Intel justifiably remains one of the most lauded companies on the planet not
for the quality of its chips, but for its consistent innovation in
production. It's a manufacturing company first and foremost, and its R&D is
geared towards keeping its facilities full.

What falls off the end of the Intel production doesn't really matter.

This hardly helps you, dear reader, as you're waiting for a window to
refresh, or a QuickTime export to finish, but it's the reason for Intel's
importance in the global economy, when superior products from Texas
Instruments, IBM and AMD are available. The markets demand consistency, and
only Intel can satisfy the need for consistent production levels without
some disruption.

So where does this fit in to Apple's future plans? With iPod revenues now
matching computer revenues, the computer business is now far less important
to Apple than it was. And more importantly, consumer music devices is where
all the growth is.

Putting Intel Inside was never the smartest technical decision. But it makes
it easier for Apple to move to a software licensing business for Mac OS X,
or sell the computer business completely.

For now, perhaps Apple's creative agency can do something with a snail. 



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