- Sep 5, 2000
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OK,
I'm building a new system and comparing the XP to the Northwood.
The biggest argument I hear in favor of AMD on almost all forums is that the XP chips are better as far as price/performance goes.
I hear things like:
"I just can't justify spending the extra $$ on an Intel-based system when AMD is so much cheaper"
and
"AMD chips are much better price/performance wise than their Intel counterparts"
But when I price out a P4 1.6A ($139) and an XP 1900 ($160), it seems that the Woody is the better deal.(prices from NewEgg)
Now according to XP's naming conventions, the XP 1900 should perform on par with a 1.9 GHz P4, right? And the 1.6A should OC to that no problem. So again, the P4 seems to be the better deal.
It just doesn't seem that the price/performance argument holds true anymore. Before the Northwoods, I'd have said it did...but now?
What is your take on this?
Thanks!
I'm building a new system and comparing the XP to the Northwood.
The biggest argument I hear in favor of AMD on almost all forums is that the XP chips are better as far as price/performance goes.
I hear things like:
"I just can't justify spending the extra $$ on an Intel-based system when AMD is so much cheaper"
and
"AMD chips are much better price/performance wise than their Intel counterparts"
But when I price out a P4 1.6A ($139) and an XP 1900 ($160), it seems that the Woody is the better deal.(prices from NewEgg)
Now according to XP's naming conventions, the XP 1900 should perform on par with a 1.9 GHz P4, right? And the 1.6A should OC to that no problem. So again, the P4 seems to be the better deal.
It just doesn't seem that the price/performance argument holds true anymore. Before the Northwoods, I'd have said it did...but now?
What is your take on this?
Thanks!
