Originally posted by: ncage
Do the Socket 754 athy 64's use the same core as the socket 939?
Originally posted by: ncage
Do the Socket 754 athy 64's use the same core as the socket 939?
Originally posted by: ncage
Do the Socket 754 athy 64's use the same core as the socket 939?
Originally posted by: 2Xtreme21
Is it worth the $50 more for the SD over the Venice?
Originally posted by: ncage
Do the Socket 754 athy 64's use the same core as the socket 939?
Originally posted by: AstroCreep
Originally posted by: 2Xtreme21
Is it worth the $50 more for the SD over the Venice?
Depends on how ya look at it.
The only difference in the two is that the SD has the 1MB cache versus the 512K. Other than that they have the same memory controller and same updates (SSE3).
Personally, for $50, I'd go with the SD.![]()
Originally posted by: classy
Wow 278 for a 3700+. That has got to be in the running for best bang for the buck. Wow the X2 is really nice, but I, like probably 80% of the people will never truly utilize the benefits of a dual core. I still want one, but that 3700 price is tempting.
Originally posted by: classy
Wow 278 for a 3700+. That has got to be in the running for best bang for the buck. Wow the X2 is really nice, but I, like probably 80% of the people will never truly utilize the benefits of a dual core. I still want one, but that 3700 price is tempting.
Originally posted by: RideFree
Ed over @ Overclockers has some excellent comments on several of the ??s posed by several in this thread. . .
What you really need to ask yourself before buying a dual-core is, "How often do I or could I do more than one big thing at the same time?"
If the answer is "almost never," then this probably won't be for you for a couple years. If, on the other hand, you often stop doing other things just to let the machine do one big task, this annoys you, and you're willing to pay to make that stop, well, this is for you.