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Sandy Bridge Become Quicker With Linux 3.3, 3.4

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  • Luke_Wolf
    replied
    Originally posted by bongmaster2
    well ivy bridge is close to liano. there are only 10-20% missing. trinity ofc wil daramatically increase the performance from ca. 6570 to 7750 this summer, while intel will reach that level with haswell in spring 2013.
    Ivy Bridge might be close to Llano, however it will be competing with Trinity, and the rest of the 7xxx series lineup, and I seriously doubt Haswell which will be competing with Trinity's Successor and the 8xxx series lineup, unless they've rearchitected their GPU , will go much past Llano.

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  • Luke_Wolf
    replied
    Originally posted by bongmaster2
    y ivy bridge and haswell will make middle class laptop graphic cards obsolete.
    the only thing missing is dafault vaapi support for gstreamer , vappi, flash, html5/vp8.
    that is very unlikely, it can be said of AMD's Trinity, and future APUs but Intel will probably continue to lag around the bottom end of whatever the current generation at the time will be. Particularly given I doubt they'll be competitive by Ivy bridge and by the time Haswell comes out, AMD will have had time to completely optimize GCN and we have yet to see where Kepler stands.

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  • markg85
    replied
    How many more speedups can intel squeeze out?

    Now i'm really wondering how the linux performance compares to the windows performance since they seem to keep improving the linux version all the time.

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  • Leinad
    replied
    speed up in Ubuntu 12.04

    I thought that major performance speed up in kernel 3.3 is thanks to RC6 support, isn't it? And Ubuntu 12.04 has backported RC6 support for Intel.

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  • crazycheese
    replied
    Thank you, Intel!

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  • phoronix
    started a topic Sandy Bridge Become Quicker With Linux 3.3, 3.4

    Sandy Bridge Become Quicker With Linux 3.3, 3.4

    Phoronix: Sandy Bridge Become Quicker With Linux 3.3, 3.4

    With the release of the Linux 3.3 kernel being imminent and the Linux 3.4 kernel drm-next already offering lots of changes, here are some Intel Sandy Bridge benchmarks comparing the Linux 3.2 kernel to a near-final Linux 3.3 kernel and then the drm-next kernel that's largely a 3.3 kernel but with the DRM driver code that will work its way into Linux 3.4.

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
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