AMD’s Ontario Computing Performance Leaked Out

The second Fusion based processor named “Ontario” which is aimed at netbooks, tablets and related low power gadgets are expected to ship in the 4Q of 2010. But the Fusion’s performance is only smoke and mirrors for us, now the BOINC Distributed Computing was the first to reveal the Ontario computing performance.
The BOINC testing data can be used for measuring the CPU integer and floating-point operations performance for each core. The data indicate that Ontario has clock speed of a 1.4-1.6GHz processor, the integer capacity reach 3.047GIPs, and the floating-point capacity reach 1.351GFLOPs.
The table also lists the integer and floating-point operations performance of the Atom D510, Athlon II X2 250u and the Phenom II X4 965 BE. Compared the data, we can see that Ontario’s integer and floating-point operations performance is 1 times close to the Atom D510, but slightly lower than the Athlon II X2 250u.

July 29th, 2010 at 9:21 pm
The source is:
http://www.hardware-infos.com/news.php?news=3644
July 30th, 2010 at 6:21 pm
Don’t you notice the “BOINC Distributed Computing”? It is the link of the source. But anyway, thanks.
July 31st, 2010 at 10:02 pm
http://citavia.blog.de/2010/06/29/llano-tri-core-and-ontario-dual-core-spotted-8884456/
August 1st, 2010 at 8:27 pm
but I think this fusion is rubbish. Why did it take so many years just to stick GPU and CPU on one piece of silicon. While AMD has access to both CPU and GPU architecture I was expecting more like AMDs version of CUDA + CPU hybrid thing. Optimized GPU is clearly faster than CPU, what can I say, AMD is one stupid idiotic company. Multicore is also BS, in future the game developers might just quit messing around with those stupid threads because it is easier to make the whole game run on GPU than make it 16< threaded.