yes, it's been discussed a number of times, but since computers change with the wind, i figured i'd make another threadanywho, little brother's looking at upgrading his motherboard and processor...i currently have an E2180 that i'm more than happy with, but while checking online, AMD is consistently cheaper than Intel for (slightly) faster processorsnow, this has always been the case, AMD is always cheaper than Intel...the first computer i ever built by myself from scratch was a 1ghz AMD tbird and that thing is still chugging away, but that's the extent of my AMD experience...is there any compelling reason to go with Intel over AMD when he's only looking at ~$100 processors? dual-core is a must, 64-bit is not (unless y'all can give me a compelling reason why 64-bit is worth investing in)primary uses for his computer are basic gaming (the most intense of which would probably be oblivion, but that's on the video card...he also plays WoW, but i've never played it and don't know what resources it uses), web stuff, word processing, and some basic video/audio stuffif y'all think AMD is acceptable, what processor/mobo combos would you suggest? seen any good deals recently?[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 9:13 AM. Reason : .]
11/8/2007 9:12:01 AM
All AMD dual core CPU's are 64bit afaik.You're only going to see small differences in speed between the high end CPU's anyhow so I'd suggest going with AMD for the price per frame per second bargain! I think the 6400's are out now and about 200 bucks, or a 600 for about 150.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128052looks like a good inexpensive motherboard. i'm not a huge fan of onboard video but a lot of boards seem to come with it these days and it's always useful if your shit fries i suppose.
11/8/2007 9:18:50 AM
There is absolutely no reason at all to go with AMD over Intel right now. At any price point, any number of cores, anything. Intel > AMD across the board. Even for a $100 processor. Phenom may or may not change this, but as of right now, go with Intel.
11/8/2007 9:19:03 AM
^pretty much what he said, and this is coming from someone who only ever got amds back in the day, when intel chips were hot, power hungry, and inefficient.intel finally got their shit together for this one, the beauty of competition
11/8/2007 9:48:05 AM
^^ but there IS a reason...this is a QUICK comparison, and i may be missing something (both retail):$120 - AMD 5200+ (2.6ghz, 1000mhz FSB, 1.3-1.35v)$128 - Intel E4500 (2.2ghz, 800mhz FSB, 0.96-1.33v)links:http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103759http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819115031so do you think the AMD will perform WORSE than the Intel? because even if the 400mhz processor speed difference and the 200mhz FSB speed difference mean nothing, it's STILL cheaper...maybe the voltage is a big deal? because it'll be running F@H when he's not using it, so i would assume the voltages will be pretty much maxed 24/7
11/8/2007 9:55:24 AM
^it does, different technology, smaller manufacturing process 65nm is faster than 90nmintel > amd
11/8/2007 10:09:30 AM
^^http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html?modelx=33&model1=914&model2=878&chart=435Not the same exact processor, but the closest one on that list.Look, I haven't bought an Intel processor since the Pentium II days. Back then, the only reason to go AMD was if you could only afford the most absolute dirt cheap PC out there. Then they started kicking Intel's ass with one product cycle after another. Since the release of the Conroe's though, AMD has had no answer. All they can do is keep cutting prices because they are no longer completive from a performance standpoint. Clock for clock, Intel is almost 40% faster, and they can clock their processors much higher than AMD with much lower power usage. We are almost back to the days of the K6-2, where the only reason to go AMD was the for the most absolute dirt cheap processor out there. Hopefully Phenom will turn things around a bit because competition is good. But as of today, there is no good reason to build a new PC with an AMD processor.[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 10:21 AM. Reason : :]
11/8/2007 10:10:28 AM
11/8/2007 10:39:08 AM
okay, intel it is (i noticed the 90nm vs 65nm, but didn't realize the difference)...thanks for the help
11/8/2007 10:48:39 AM
2.2Ghz at 65nm will always be faster than 2.2Ghz at 90nm b/c it has less travel path. less travel path + smaller die = less power usage and better performance than a cpu at the same speed with a larger manufacturing process (in real rough layman's terms)next in line is 45nm coming in December w/ Intel's new quad core cpu's (Penryn/Yorkfield)[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 12:36 PM. Reason : .]
11/8/2007 12:35:41 PM
Fwiw, I needed a simple file server box recently, so I went AMD out of consideration for cost.
11/8/2007 2:51:03 PM
Right now intel's technology is better than amd's but amd still makes fast processors...basically for a desktop it doesn't REALLY matter for a laptop intel wins hands downthey have better battery life and are faster.[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 3:10 PM. Reason : .]
11/8/2007 3:10:12 PM
http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-10442_7-6389077-1.htmlAMD smoked Intel on this comparison. And just about every other comparison I have read.
11/8/2007 3:20:06 PM
11/8/2007 3:23:33 PM
OPPS, didnt see the date. damn thats old. could still be valid if he is buying older model processors.
11/8/2007 3:25:46 PM
i sure hope he's not considering a Pentium D
11/8/2007 3:52:32 PM
^^That's before the core 2 duos came out. AMD did have the upper hand vs the pentium-D series, but once the core 2 duos came out they kinda took over.^heh yeah, i guess they still sell them. Although i did like my old Pentium-D 940, got that thing past 4.0ghz. I mean just look at this chart. What's toward the top? http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html?modelx=33&model1=871&model2=875&chart=419[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 3:56 PM. Reason : .]
11/8/2007 3:54:04 PM
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=2795&p=19from a year ago, and it hasn't changed since
11/8/2007 3:56:15 PM
amd might get back in the game when their combo gpu/cpu setups come out but until then intel is burning them on speed and power consumption.
11/8/2007 4:32:34 PM
11/8/2007 4:34:51 PM
intels usually have a larger L2 cache, which makes it actually seems faster. i think the core2duo has a 8mb L2 cache - for analogy that like have 4 gb of ram. in other words, and L2 cache of 8 mb is about 4x the norm.[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 4:38 PM. Reason : ssdf]
11/8/2007 4:37:20 PM
11/8/2007 4:41:28 PM
I'm actually going to jump into 64bit with the next build. I'm starting to work more and more with 50+mb PSDs in photoshop, and expect to be using 300+mb 16bit files next year on a daily basis. With 2gb of ram I'm easily using up most of that with the history cache, and there are times where the computer just kinda gives me the big "fuck you" when dealing with filters and such. Probably go with the E6850 if I build soon, otherwise wait and see what the new stuff is like in spring. But I'll be recommending the new quad core stuff to a video editing coworker for his upgrade. Those programs seem to make better use of the extra cores over photoshop.
11/8/2007 4:54:45 PM
how does the AMD Turion TL-66 compare to Intel's mobile processors? Like, what offering from Intel would be most comparable?(TL-66 is 2.3 GHz, 1MB cache, "up to" 1600 Mhz FSB)I was gonna go Intel, but the AMD offering is WAY cheaper.
1/9/2008 3:50:24 PM
the AMD is 65nm, is it not? the only difference is the cache, i think (which can be a big deal)...the tl-66 is 512kb/core and comparable intels are 1mb/core (again, i think)[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 4:00 PM. Reason : .]
1/9/2008 3:58:32 PM
In my experience AMD's mobile line is lacking. Not as fast, worse battery life, slower in general.
1/9/2008 4:17:17 PM
I haven't been impressed either from the few laptops I've had lately... although that one with the AMD chip was also running only 1gb ram with Vista, which we all know is asking for slowness
1/9/2008 4:20:14 PM
I got a dual core AMD 64x2 in my current laptop. I wanted to make the jump to 64-bit sooner rather than later because all of the production systems I have to work on are already 64-bit. My OS is still 32-bit XP but its been a great help to be able to run 64-bit operating systems inside a VMWare session. From what I could tell the Intel Dual Cores are still mostly 32-bit guts with some extended memory handling so they can address more than 4gb. My eyes started to glaze over and I had flashbacks to my systems classes when I started reading this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86-64-- Dave
1/9/2008 4:24:21 PM
The only reason why Intel is ruling is because when they switched from Pentium D family to the Core 2 Duo, the performance increase was very high. Average somewhere of 20-40%, even more in other tests. When manufacturers release a new line of processors, it's only been about a 10% performance increase from the last generation. This is like stating that Intel jumped an extra generation or two.
1/9/2008 5:02:13 PM
desktop Intel > AMDLaptop Intel >>>>>>AMD
1/9/2008 5:25:02 PM
why is it that AMD seems to always have smaller a L2 cache, and can you compare the two numbers directly?
1/9/2008 5:25:05 PM
Cache memory takes up a lot of real estate on the die, so it's very expensive per mb. And AMD is cheap so....
1/9/2008 11:06:38 PM
doesn't AMD have much faster bus speed, though?although isn't the clock speed they advertise "effective", whatever that means, instead of actual?
1/10/2008 1:53:05 AM
e4300 ftw!
1/10/2008 8:33:32 AM
for computer chess matches the L2 cache is very important(obviously not the only important factor) for the optimal performance - long story behind the theory of this and why computer programs need, or desire a larger L2 cache, and i don't feel like explaining it, and thats why most computer chess enthusiasts go with intel these days.[Edited on January 10, 2008 at 8:43 AM. Reason : sdfgh]
1/10/2008 8:43:18 AM
whats funny is that intel has better chips, but amd has better support structure (hypertransport)...
1/10/2008 8:45:14 AM
FWIW, here's an article that compares two equivalent notebooks, one running the AMD TL-66 (2.3ghz/1mb/800mhz) and the other running the Intel T7300 (2.0ghz/4mb/800mhz):http://www.anandtech.com/mobile/showdoc.aspx?i=3117&p=1
1/10/2008 10:29:46 AM
Having good performance will extend the lifetime usability of the laptop. So having the extra power in there would possibly extend the use of your laptop by 6-12 months and would totally be worth the extra cash.Now if you feel dirty buying Intel's I'd wholly support going AMD.
1/10/2008 10:33:13 AM