With the Thoroughbred Revision B core AMD has given new life
to the Athlon XP, and it couldn't have come at a better time. The Athlon
XP 2600+, for the most part, offers performance competitive with the Pentium
4 2.53GHz; the same can be said about the Athlon XP 2400+ and the Pentium
4 2.4B. There's no clear performance advantage in either case for the vast
majority of applications, but where AMD does hold the advantage is in price.
The Athlon XP 2600+ and 2400+, once available, will retail for significantly
less than their equivalently performing Intel counterparts.
While we don't approve of AMD pushing for essentially a paper-launch
of these faster Thoroughbred parts, the CPUs are a welcome addition to the
Athlon XP line. With the Pentium 4 still on track to hit 3GHz by the end
of this year, and with a Q1-03 introduction of Hammer being very likely,
it may be up to the Athlon XP to close the year out for AMD.
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