- Apr 19, 2005
- 7,461
- 500
- 126
A CPU I bought 14 months ago is the same price today. What is with the price of CPU's? 
And memory prices have tripled...bad time for upgrades.
And memory prices have tripled...bad time for upgrades.
A CPU I bought 14 months ago is the same price today. What is with the price of CPU's?
And memory prices have tripled...bad time for upgrades.
AMD is owning the price/performance category right now and, given the economy, that makes them a very attractive alternative.
AMD is owning the price/performance category right now and, given the economy, that makes them a very attractive alternative.
It doesn't "own" it, but it is an attractive alternative. Equally priced Intel CPUs are very much in the ballpark with their AMD counterparts.
It doesn't "own" it, but it is an attractive alternative. Equally priced Intel CPUs are very much in the ballpark with their AMD counterparts.
I just bought parts for a new build. I was on a VERY limited buget but I insisted on a quad core.
So I bought an AMD Athlon II x4 620 for effectively $75 (part of a cpu/mobo combo deal for $149). What Intel quad core cpu would be "very much in the ballpark" with that? I honestly looked and did not see one.
I just bought parts for a new build. I was on a VERY limited buget but I insisted on a quad core.
So I bought an AMD Athlon II x4 620 for effectively $75 (part of a cpu/mobo combo deal for $149). What Intel quad core cpu would be "very much in the ballpark" with that? I honestly looked and did not see one.
AMD is owning the price/performance category right now and, given the economy, that makes them a very attractive alternative.
Totally, i considered a phenom II with my new build but i just gotta have the best and went with i7. If my budget was more limited i probably wouldve went phenom II, i was surprised how well it actually did vs an i7.
A CPU I bought 14 months ago is the same price today.
It doesn't "own" it, but it is an attractive alternative. Equally priced Intel CPUs are very much in the ballpark with their AMD counterparts.
Depends what you're going to be using this new build for. And no, you didn't get the x4 for "effectively $75". It's closer to $100 and the mobo closer to $50.
You do understand why Amd had to price those quad's so low right?
The Mobo retails for $90. The CPU $99. I simply split the difference. Completely subjective, just as your assertion was. Which is what makes it so silly for you to try to tell me what I paid.
What the computer will be used for is really irrelevant (but if you must know, web surfing, streaming video, photo editing, and iTunes).
This buyer had no more than $100 to spend on a CPU. This buyer required a quad core processor. What is my Intel alternative?
No, what's silly is saying a CPU cost $X by cutting a combo deal's price in half. My assertion was that the CPU is the more expensive item in the combo, which is clearly true.
There is currently no new Intel quad-core CPU in the $99 price range, but there are dual-core Intel CPUs that are and that will be as fast as your X4 620 in the tasks you mentioned.
Why do you require a quad-core CPU?
When applications go more multithreaded the x4 will pull out ahead.
It's also worth having for the upgrade path-- not being on a dead socket. You also get more mobo for your money with AMD boards-- Crossfire, Optical SP-DIF digital out, etc.
