I haven't bought a desktop CPU or system for 13 years. Not since my Core 2 Duo E4300 1.8GHz, overclocked to 3.2GHz. For the last decade I've been exclusively running MacBook Pros and in the last few months a ChromeBook. I'm now in the market for a modest, low power consumption desktop but unclear exactly where to dive in. The CPU world seems a lot more complex than it used to be!
My personal points of reference are few, looking at cpubenchmark.net:
My old E4300 (similar to an E6850) 65W single thread rating 1187, CPU Mark 1124
My 2012 MPB has the i7-3615QM 45W single thread rating 1680, CPU Mark 5030
I'm initially drawn to the Ryzen 7 4800U 15W single thread rating, 2633, CPU Mark 17546.
The Ryzen looks good compared to what I'm used to. Much more performance for a lot less energy. What's the catch? It even seems to have half decent graphics built in. I'm quite tempted by the recently announced Asus PN50, seems like a tiny box with great performance - just no opportunity for external GPU.
Questions:
How capable is the 4800U's GPU? Can it actually cope with modern games at 1080p?
Is it possible to buy a Ryzen 7 4800U system with potential to add a PCIe GPU?
What's the advantage in going up to the 65W desktop processors with all their extra heat, energy, size and noise?
I think what I really want is very small desktop based around the 4800U with a single slot for an external GPU, does such a thing exist?
Should add, this will be a Windows 10 'family' PC. Used for web, office, photo editing, streaming and (potentially) light gaming.
My personal points of reference are few, looking at cpubenchmark.net:
My old E4300 (similar to an E6850) 65W single thread rating 1187, CPU Mark 1124
My 2012 MPB has the i7-3615QM 45W single thread rating 1680, CPU Mark 5030
I'm initially drawn to the Ryzen 7 4800U 15W single thread rating, 2633, CPU Mark 17546.
The Ryzen looks good compared to what I'm used to. Much more performance for a lot less energy. What's the catch? It even seems to have half decent graphics built in. I'm quite tempted by the recently announced Asus PN50, seems like a tiny box with great performance - just no opportunity for external GPU.
Questions:
How capable is the 4800U's GPU? Can it actually cope with modern games at 1080p?
Is it possible to buy a Ryzen 7 4800U system with potential to add a PCIe GPU?
What's the advantage in going up to the 65W desktop processors with all their extra heat, energy, size and noise?
I think what I really want is very small desktop based around the 4800U with a single slot for an external GPU, does such a thing exist?
Should add, this will be a Windows 10 'family' PC. Used for web, office, photo editing, streaming and (potentially) light gaming.