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I'm just forming an argument![]()
A flawed one.
I don't need to argue with you about what CPU you're going to choose, as it makes no difference to me.
I've owned the best AMD has to offer, and most of the best of Intel's SB line up.
We'll just have to wait for the release.
We've only been waiting 6 years.
And we can wait 2 months longer.
I tried, this is the second time I went Sandy bridge.
AMD peeved me that much, I bought the Maximus IV Extreme when they announced the last delay.
patience is a virtue, my friend
I'd rather buy one CPU to last me several years. I'd rather not buy one now and one in a year or so.
An overclocked 2500k would last a few generations of graphics cards before it'd start to limit things in games, you need to wait until BD's released to see prices and performance before you can really decide what's best.
Phenom II processors are far from the slouches people claim them to be
Clock for clock they aren't any faster than Intel's Core 2 which is like 4 years old now?
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/processor-architecture-benchmark,2974.html
It's comparing the different architecture's, to do this you need to have all CPUs running at the same clock speed with the same amount of cores, otherwise how would you compare how fast each chip is on a clock for clock basis?
My point was, despite increasing the number of cores and clockspeeds AMD's current chips really aren't faster than Intel's Core 2 line of chips which are pretty old these days.
What it shows is that if AMD hadn't increased the number of cores and clockspeeds they wouldn't be any faster than Intels core 2 chips, but AMD did increase the number of cores and clockspeeds which makes the review irrelevant and pointless.
It makes it far from pointless and irrelevant. Throwing cores into the equation doesn't "fix" the CPU's performance.
I just asked what, generally, are the threads used for![]()