time
Storage? I am Storage!
I realize that most people here have already given up on AMD CPUs, but up to now I was still prepared to consider them - specifically, the lower-power models. 'Cause when it comes to the CPU speed religion, I'm no longer a believer (I don't fold etc).
It follows that I don't believe in quad-core desktop CPUs either. As a trade-off, higher CPU clocks in dual-core CPUs make a lot more sense to me. So Phenom X3 and X4 never even made it onto my radar.
After a lot of research recently to try to catch up on available hardware, I noticed that the Phenom X2 550 (a disabled Phenom X4) performs quite nicely, in fact comfortably better than Core 2 except for Photoshop et al. Quite a good gaming solution to bear in mind.
But everything else sucks. The L3-cache-less Phenom-inspired 7750 etc use ridiculous amount of power for their quite modest performance. The old 65nm 'Energy Efficient' 45W 2.6GHz Athlons are way too expensive for their extremely modest performance.
And then Intel released the Pentium E6300 (not the same as the model from a couple of years back - stupid Intel). I haven't been able to find out why (apart from a higher FSB), but according to XbitLabs it absolutely skittles its lesser siblings such as the 5300. Never more than a couple of percent adrift of the more expensive 7400, it's faster than the first 2.8GHz Core 2 Duos and cheap as chips (sorry).
And now I can get decently equipped S775 motherboards for reasonable dollars (eg Gigabyte GA-EG41MF-US2H). Okay, so the onboard graphics is less than half as good as the AMD chipset equivalent, but it's way better than it used to be, and have you looked at how cheap decent standalone graphics cards are right now?
So I give up. End of the line for AMD for me. But how good is that E6300 (O/C to 4GHz), and why?
It follows that I don't believe in quad-core desktop CPUs either. As a trade-off, higher CPU clocks in dual-core CPUs make a lot more sense to me. So Phenom X3 and X4 never even made it onto my radar.
After a lot of research recently to try to catch up on available hardware, I noticed that the Phenom X2 550 (a disabled Phenom X4) performs quite nicely, in fact comfortably better than Core 2 except for Photoshop et al. Quite a good gaming solution to bear in mind.
But everything else sucks. The L3-cache-less Phenom-inspired 7750 etc use ridiculous amount of power for their quite modest performance. The old 65nm 'Energy Efficient' 45W 2.6GHz Athlons are way too expensive for their extremely modest performance.
And then Intel released the Pentium E6300 (not the same as the model from a couple of years back - stupid Intel). I haven't been able to find out why (apart from a higher FSB), but according to XbitLabs it absolutely skittles its lesser siblings such as the 5300. Never more than a couple of percent adrift of the more expensive 7400, it's faster than the first 2.8GHz Core 2 Duos and cheap as chips (sorry).
And now I can get decently equipped S775 motherboards for reasonable dollars (eg Gigabyte GA-EG41MF-US2H). Okay, so the onboard graphics is less than half as good as the AMD chipset equivalent, but it's way better than it used to be, and have you looked at how cheap decent standalone graphics cards are right now?
So I give up. End of the line for AMD for me. But how good is that E6300 (O/C to 4GHz), and why?