Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Good points about power consumption. I haven't really cared for that since I either live in residences at university or apartments with utilities included. I can understand people's concern long term. The article does compare long term costs though and it seems it takes fairly long for normal usage when the prices match. Also the power consumption for that intel cpu over amd at most will be 100W more which is 1 light bulb. I hardly see anyone complaining about having 1 more lightbulb turned on in their home, am I wrong?
Certainly the same argument is not being made in video forums for why people should choose 7900GTX over X1900XTX. And Markfw900 isn't you caring for long term costs contradicts your RX-8 purchase? It gets what like 17mpg in city and needs refilling of 4 quarts of oil every 2 weeks? Imo It's negligible to compare electricity bills for 1 PC system (not 10) over the course of 2 years (how long ppl on anantech keep systems). And I am not so sure if AMD cost $130 and was smoking intel that cost $295, the same argument would have been made against amd had its power consumption been higher than intel.
There's a few other things to consider as well...
1. While it hasn't been proven scientifically (no study done to my knowledge), the hotter a chip runs internally, the shorter it's lifespan.
2. While the chip may be clocked high enough according to it's settings, throttling will kick in often (unless you're water cooling), and it should get worse over a period of a few months.
3. He added a $50 HSF and $7.50 case fan to the 805 (while stating that the included HSF was fine for the AMD). So we need to add another $57.50 to the price of the 805. This makes it closer to $190 vs $295...
4. He didn't state what the ambient temps were, but I don't imagine that he did it on a warm spring day without A/C...

5. For a truly budget system, you'll want good on-board graphics. For AMD, the 6100 line of mobos include a Vista ready DX-9 GeForce 6100...and the Radeon Express 200 include a good Vista Ready graphics solution as well (either are ~$60 each). The Radeon line is available for Intel, but NOT for dual core Intel...so let's add another $40 for a seperate video card. Now we're at $230 vs $295
So, by saving ~$65, you are:
1. risking a dead CPU from overclocking
2. adding the headache of monitoring the ambient and chip temerature constantly
3. probably lose your CPU sooner
4. performing 2-14% slower in all real-world tests except DVD shrink...
5. using almost twice the power