From The Inquirer:
OVER AT THE US trademark and patent office, there's a slightly elderly patent successfully filed by AMD back in 1999 which indicates that the firm could provide hyperthreading for its processors, if it should so wish.
The patent, numbered 5,944,816, entitled "Microprocessor configured to execute multiple threads including interrupt service routines", outlines how a CPU can execute multiple threads concurrently.
It specifically says that in one test, a CPU executed at least two threads concurrently.
The patent builds on a number of technical documents on simultaneous multithreading, including an Intel document from 1994 called Multiprocessor Specification.
So will we see a hyperthreaded Clawhammer (Athlon64)? Well the patent seems to suggest that's not outside the bounds of possibility.
Down and dirty with the details: link
If I'm reading it right it doesn't talk about true SMT. It only discusses running a thread and multiple ISRs (Interrupt Service Routines) concurrently and not multiple threads in general. I guess The Inquirer is going a bit far in predictions for HyperThreading.
Though, conceptually, it is good to see that AMD has some early form of HyperThreading. I'm practically convinced that we'll see them with SMT capabilities by K9 (don't know what they've got planned for revisions of hammer, but K9 will almost definitely include this, IMO).
What do the uber (and not so uber) geeks think?