The i3 is 18% faster in AC unity and 8% faster in Advanced Warfare, which is "not much faster", but you claim GTA at 14% faster for FX proves the FX is far superior. OK, if you say so. I guess the criteria for significant difference is different depending on which company wins. In any case, it is pretty pathetic that we are arguing about whether a 125 watt top end processor from AMD is better or not compared to a 53 watt mid range processor from intel. And to use the argument that so many AMD fans use, I bet one would be very hard pressed to see any of those differences in an actual gaming session.
All those benchmarks pretty much show the 8370E and i3 in the same ballpark with an edge to the i3.
The i3 4370 is tempting, but the pricetag here doesn't warrant the buy, I just may as well get an i5 4590 for the same amount.Hello everyone. Its that neighborhood i3 user here ready to give my $.02.
I was in the process of planning my build when I discovered that Intel made a new CPU as part of the Haswell Refresh line. The i3 4370. It comes with a base clock of 3.8GHz and 4MB of L3$ which makes it the fastest i3 yet. I saw the benchmarks of lesser processors (i3 4330 and i3 4360) and then just went to Microcenter and picked it up for $140. No questions asked, no second thoughts, no regrets.
And a FX needs to be 1.2GHz faster in order to match a 3.5GHz i3 yet ignoring that fact? You must be doing this on purpose.
If you need to be right you can be, I'm ok with it. You can even have the last word.
But you'll have to post again.
I stand by everything I posted, and will probably
post as much again if the occasion comes up.
I'll even throw you a good natured bone, Intels low end today is
often better than AMD's high end from a few years ago.
I'd still buy another FX if my i7 dies tomorrow. Crazy world ain't it?
Really ??? take them one graph at the time and see how many times the FX at 4.4GHz is faster than the Core i3.
And yes im talking about the FX8320E Overclocked to 4.4GHz.
Intel's low end today is often better than AMD's high end today as well. You can buy both today, BNIB and the i3 will be better more often than not... Today. Period.
.
Blank statement...
It is better in almost nothing useful..
Eventualy in Sysmark.
Or in ST subscores of MT softs...
Not blank, this thread is over 430 replies long, a link was posted much further back. Sorry I don't include it with every post for the naysayers who don't want to believe it.
They are talking of high end, with a FX8370E you can compress your files while doing a circuit simulation, an i3 would choke with such usages for wich it is not designed.
You were the one to use the word "considerably" faster. I havent said anything like that in my posts, i just said that the FX is "faster" than core i3 in the games above.
Also, Core i3 4330 is only 6% faster (avg) than FX at 4.4GHz in AC : Unity and not 18%. And in Advanced Warfare the FX at 4.4GHz is a little faster (avg) than the Core i3.
Hello everyone. Its that neighborhood i3 user here ready to give my $.02.
I was in the process of planning my build when I discovered that Intel made a new CPU as part of the Haswell Refresh line. The i3 4370. It comes with a base clock of 3.8GHz and 4MB of L3$ which makes it the fastest i3 yet. I saw the benchmarks of lesser processors (i3 4330 and i3 4360) and then just went to Microcenter and picked it up for $140. No questions asked, no second thoughts, no regrets.
I haven't been disappointed at all by this processor. All of the benchmarks are accurate and there's no bait and switch going on. I almost exclusively game on it and every game I have runs smoothly on it. Everything from Skyrim to BF4 runs without huge FPS drops. I can browse with as many tabs as I want, given that Flash decides to work on that day. Given that its a dual core things like processing videos is reasonably fast.
Most people also lack any understanding of what Hyperthreading actually does and just parrots stuff like "HT doesn't work in games". Hyperthreading works by allowing each core to execute two threads, allowing the physical core to use resources that would have otherwise remained idle. Its functionality is so supported its almost essentially supported on the hardware level. Games and most programs can't identify which "CPU" is a "fake" or a "real" core either. There are rare applications in which Hyperthreading does not work, but gaming is not one of those given that it can use 4 threads to begin with.
The "quad core brigade" isn't doing anyone favors by constantly crapping on the i3 series. Its okay to dislike the i3, but at least do so by its merits. Just because something is a quad core doesn't automatically make it good or superior to my i3. I bet most of the "quad core brigade" wouldn't use an quad core Atom instead of an i3. If it performs satisfactorily to your needs in benchmarks, then that's all there is to it. I don't get how people on here can be so scientific and go strictly by the numbers in these tons of FX vs i5/i7 threads but try their hardest to tarnish the i3 because a dual core performing at that level makes them uncomfortable.
Sure, and for those people who want to spend no more than $150 that are doing simultaneous file compression and circuit simulation, the FX8 would be the better buy.
Sounds like a very common use case and I'm sure there is a huge market for it... :\
Microcenter prices are not really relevant to general purchasers. In addition, the Microcenter deals on i3 are very poor compared to their deals on higher end intel and AMD cpus. In the normal market, FX8xxx and an i3 are pretty much the same price.
And my viewpoint is just the opposite. I would consider it a toss up for the i3 and FX8xxx for gaming, with the i3 having the edge in older games and very competitive in current games, while the FX *might* pull ahead in future more threaded games under DX12.
But for the normal user, who just does mainly social apps, browsing, even office work, I would never pick an FX8xxx over an i3. It uses more power, and is much slower in lightly or even moderately threaded workloads, which is what nearly all the casual user does.
Edit: not to mention with the FX, you have to either use awful motherboard graphics or add a discrete gpu.
You can replace simulations by gaming, there s enough cores to compress or do whatever else in the background...
That s a matter of available throughput, you may not need a lot 80% of the time but there s instances where a lot of instantaneous throughput is required, with i3s there s few reserve left and indeed comparisons of those CPUs with FX8xxx shouldnt even be put on the table other than as blatant exemples of lacks of evaluation capabilities...
Intel's low end today is often better than AMD's high end today as well. You can buy both today, BNIB and the i3 will be better more often than not... Today. Period.
And with an i3 I can encode using quick sync and still play a game.
You can replace simulations by gaming, there s enough cores to compress or do whatever else in the background...
That s a matter of available throughput, you may not need a lot 80% of the time but there s instances where a lot of instantaneous throughput is required, with i3s there s few reserve left and indeed comparisons of those CPUs with FX8xxx shouldnt even be put on the table other than as blatant exemples of lacks of evaluation capabilities...
I can buy a new Pentium II or a 486 dx2/66 as well, bnib.
That does not make them "current".
What you could have said is AMD is currently manufacturing them, which I have no idea if they are or not, but it would have worked better.
Who said BNIB is what "makes them current"? Sound like more logic fail on your part.
If you want to make ridiculous arguments, go ahead. Nothing changes. It just shows how weak your position is. Sound like you have nothing worthwhile left to say but just felt like getting another post in.
I mean really? you just brought up a 486 processor. That's your new defense? A processor from the early 90's?
The ADF sure is getting desperate.
I also correct your spelling when I quote you.What you could have said is AMD is currently manufacturing them, which I have no idea if they are or not, but it would have worked better.
MiddleOfTheRoad:
I have a dual 12 core, total of 24 core AMD system and a dual hex core 24 THREAD system (5639's). When they were both running F@H, the Intel system was winning in PPD by 20%. That software you are saying is also biased ? I am just sick of this thread and done with the exaggeration of benchmark results.
AMD in general is NOT on top. PERIOD IMO.
If Intel was rolling out +20% or better across the board with every CPU refresh, I don't think this thread would be here.
LGA2011 v3 should obviate the need for this thread. That's the high-end. Everyone knows it, some folks just have creative ways of trying to ignore that fact . . .