- Aug 15, 2013
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I will run super Pi 1m tonight on my parents 1037u and report back on the results.
Awesome, thanks! :thumbsup:
I will run super Pi 1m tonight on my parents 1037u and report back on the results.
Here's my "contribution"
Although not the Celeron 1037U (1.8GHz Ivy), this Celeron 1007U (1.5GHz Ivy) comes with 2GB DDR3.
And 320GB HDD.
And a built-in SD card reader.
And a built-in keyboard/trackpad.
And a removable 3000mAh battery.
And a 11.6" screen.
Wait a sec..
Yes, its a borderline "netbook"!
For $200!!
Has 1 x USB 3.0 and 2 x USB 2.0's, hook up w/ wireless KB/mouse and attach to back of TV via HDMI out?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16834231118
edit: if you're having trouble w/ AT's redirect, here's the item # on newegg: N82E16834231118
Akumax that netbook is a whole heck of alot of hardware for the price. I wish you had not posted that, it makes me want to snag it! That would be a good christmas present for the girlfriend
Awesome deal!! (It even has usb 3.0) A Chromebook killer for certain.
I posted it because I "want" it! Do I "need" it? Dunno...
Seriously, underrated power! Swap in an SSD, maybe upgrade to 4GB (8GB?)
And this powerhouse is GOOD TO GO!
Oh man somebody hide my wallet...
I wouldn't count on upgrading an Asus laptop that easy. I have / had an X401A 14", and you have to remove the keyboard and motherboard just to get at the hard drive and RAM. Asus has been designing their laptops to be NON-upgradable by normal users.
Acer, on the other hand... on both my Aspire One, and Aspire V5, remove ONE screw, slide the back panel off, and everything is nice and user-accessable.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813138368
Price on the Biostar Celeron 847 just dropped to $64.99 with free shipping.
That is not quite as good as the free 8GB deal I was expecting, but it is a move in the right direction.
Update:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813138368
The Biostar Celeron 847 now carries a 15% discount code. (ends 11/4) This brings price to ~$55 with free shipping.
Yeah, this smells like 1037u is on the horizon finally
Update:The Biostar Celeron 847 now carries a 15% discount code. (ends 11/4) This brings price to ~$55 with free shipping.
Yeah, this smells like 1037u is on the horizon finally
Is there anyway we can tell how many are left in stock?(EDIT: I Just checked by adding 100 to my cart. ...Newegg shows 25 left)
I am not sure who did that testing, but they seem to be idiots or else something was really gimped about their hardware or setup... My test ties very closely with the result from the laptop that nforce found. 21.517 on super pi. The a5200 is a inferior product to the 1037u and 1007u in cpu power it is just as simple as that, is anyone really surprised? I am sure a 847 celeron is better...
It also looks like Newegg has far fewer 847 motherboards in general. I never wrote down which ones they had, but I remembered seeing a page of them. Now, it's just a few.
This, in contrast, to Gigabyte Brix which I am under the impression has Haswell Celeron 2955U very close to launch. ---> http://www.gigabyte.us/microsite/342/images/models.html
I also found a benchmark for the 2955U, and it appears to be slower than the 1037U.
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Celeron+2955U+@+1.40GHz
I haven't read too much yet about the 2xxxU Celerons to know what to expect... but a bit slower for the CPU might be OK if the graphics are noticeably better, or if the power usage is lower.
I also found a benchmark for the 2955U, and it appears to be slower than the 1037U.
I haven't read too much yet about the 2xxxU Celerons to know what to expect... but a bit slower for the CPU might be OK if the graphics are noticeably better, or if the power usage is lower.
The idle power consumption is also lower in haswell compared to Ivy Bridge. (Very useful for mobile, but I am not sure how useful for desktop)
I am not surprised, there is not enough ipc difference to overcome 400mhz of clockspeed. Why in the heck do they not release a 2.0ghz. It becomes more important since these chips do not have the turbo function. Intel is in a funny position now, because now that even the lowly celeron is capable of doing nearly all tasks that a normal user needs, then what is the point in buying a better chip if you are not interested in gaming or heavy virtualization etc? I think this is responsible for them keeping such a tight lid on cpu speed. The speeds have not scaled up at all over the last few generations of chips in general and the focus is all about power draw and graphics etc.
I think you answered your own question. When CPU performance is good enough for most users, then a focus on efficiency and, the traditional weak point of Intel, graphics makes a lot of sense.
If you need more performance then an embedded board can provide, socketed ITX is a really good alternative. The lowest end socketed Celeron you can currently buy is clocked at 2.6GHz (quite a step up from the 1037) without a large penalty in power consumption. Also socketed Haswell Celerons are on the horizon and those should drive idle power down into embedded territory...
Also, there was a Pentium G3220 (Haswell) on sale for $49.99. Tons of bang for buck!