Hatisherrif
Senior member
- May 10, 2009
- 226
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We get a lot of these brand new registered posters who ask for advice, and then they will move the goal posts around constantly trying to prop up an AMD choice when it isn't optimal. It was really bad for a long time. It got extremely curiouser and curiouser. It had tapered off, but this guy is taking a similar path.
The old formula was "what CPU should I get?" and then the poster would keep trying to manufacture the bizarrest claims of their typical use. Things like "I use these two specific programs that are the two that bulldozer happens to perform well at 24x7 and nothing else on my PC". The content originally always said "I want to run VMs". Eventually after pointing out fake core count is less useful in most virtualization scenarios than single-threaded performance and a reasonable number of actual cores, the new regs magically stopped always claiming to run VMs.
This post doesn't have the same feel, but it does have a similar attitude with a little different slant. Brand new registered account, making a post hoping to have good things said about a pretty poor performing product. Refusal to accept that there are much, much better choices, or even that the older AMD architecture is better suited to his professed needs than what he's looking to buy now.
Oh well.
Actually, we get a lot of biased posters who can't tell decisions from questions. If you look at the OP's post, you will see that he had already made his decision and just wanted to ask us what he could expect from the CPU.
It seems you really get unnerved when there is something contradicting your opinion, so you make long posts which are constructed very well and make you look like a credible educated individual, but they only serve one purpose - to back your claims.
Making up conspiracy theories about new posters who manufacture claims about weird uses just so everybody has to suggest AMD proves how much paranoia is taking over your head. Intel is not in danger, don't you worry about that my friend. The consumer is the only one in danger of having outrageous prices for products which could cost much less if there were strong competition.
If someone states clearly his motives and intentions behind buying AMD (supporting the underdog, already having the compatible motherboard) and you still find something wrong with that, I cannot help but wonder: what do you have in all of this?
