Might as well just get a Sandybridge now if your main requirement is based on old single threaded software. All indications are that BD has been tuned for current and future software demands. Almost non-existent chance it will beat out Intel in running anything that was tuned for Intel chips from 10ish years ago.
The main requirement is image software but every once in a while I have to plough through hundreds of GB of data with this guy's prehistoric software...
It might be interesting. We might even conclude that your i7 is not a quad core or even a processor at all.
I object to the terminology which calls BD an 8 core. Maybe an 8 module, but it is not a core in the manner that i7 or Phenom is. And I am not going to get into a technical dissection as there are far more adept individuals on this forum.
FYI, I also objected when Phenom II used the 9xx numbering scheme after i7's. That was a prototypical and IMHO intentional misdirection which led some to believe that a 9xx from AMD was equivalent to a 9xx from Intel, when we all know it wasn't even close.
Funny, since AM3+ is more or less identical to AM3.
That may be, but BD is set for AM3+ but there are some BIOS tricks that make it work on AM3 without accessing all features, much to AMD's chagrin.
I am perfectly aware that AMD module is two integer units and some shared parts. Which is better for heavily multithreaded tasks? I'd have my money on AMD vs a 4C + HT Intel CPU of similar price. I don't care if little green martians run in hamster wheels inside the AMD CPU or if Intel uses black magic and sacrifices puppies to run their processors. If for 300$ I get a better performance running heavily threaded apps and multiple virtual machines compared to Intel, I'll get AMD. Duh!
Hard to compare now when only a handful of boards are out. I can get a ROG AM3+ board for 220? Cheapest ROG 1155 board? 340?
Quoted for future reference when Ivy Bridge processors come out.
I agree fully on the BD "vs a 4C + HT Intel CPU of similar price" (pure speculation on my part follows) now that AMD has gulped and realized that they can't get the clocks they expected, so they're dropping the price to slot in between 2500K and 2600K where they're competitive. But... what happened to the "BD will beat SB-E, BD will beat IB, BD will beat IBM Watson..." that I've been hearing for years from the AMD fan camp? IF the performance actually is around there, BD is nowhere near a paradigm-breaking CPU. It's just another "close but no cigar" from AMD. And I repeat, I still hold a microscopic glimmer of hope that the benchys will eventually show BD>Skynet.
I specifically stated "the cheapest" mobos. Sure, we can go to all sorts of extremes in the mobo game but that is not as relevant as the lowest bottom line so:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813131728
Cheapest Newegg AM3+ $59
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813186213
Cheapest Newegg LGA1155 $54
So go Intel and save a big fiver!
by the way this is no greek
i imagine a google translation?????
the words are greek but there is no syntax there thus there is no meaning to understand. translating to greek is not possible yet it is killing the context.
I typed into Google Translate:
Remember that my Roman countrymen saved you Greeks from the Barbarians!
I dunno what came out since...
It's Greek to me!
