Depending on the subject you can also median stack a number of images too - i.e. if you are taking a still life where nothing will change, or can shoot off a burst of shots without the subject moving, then you can median blend in photoshop and that does a phenomenal job at limiting noise.
e.g. this was ISO 3200 on a 3 year old camera which, unlike the brand new one in the article DOES suffer with noise about ISO 1600. I suspect the inherent noise handling in a brand new model camera would surprise the author, the results from the 6D at full resolution are superb too; no downsampling required!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cedarsphoto/8951904597/The bar was EXTREMELY dark (-2ev if memory serves, according to my friend using a film camera on the same evening). However I blended together 3 or 4 images and the results are superb.
I do wonder how big a difference there is between downsampling at capture time and rescaling the image AFTER capture time. It probably helps a bit, but not that much. Take this example -
Milky Way (partial) from Mauna Kea, Hawaii by
cedarsphoto, on Flickr
vs
Milky Way (partial) from Mauna Kea, Hawaii by
cedarsphoto, on Flickr
Identical shot just rendered at different sizes. The noise is still apparent, even in the smaller one, but the reduced dimensions do help a little.