In your opinion is there any justification to purchase the 6core cpu to replace the I7-975? It didn't look like there was enough of a performance increase to do that. I am just looking for your opinions on it?
If the time you save from the 6-core processor is significant or it helps you make more $$$ faster, then yes. Otherwise, I'd rather get an SSD! The SSD Core i7 975 will be miles ahead compared to a mechanical drive + 980X. That's what I am saving for next hehe
If the time you save from the 6-core processor is significant or it helps you make more $$$ faster, then yes. Otherwise, I'd rather get an SSD! The SSD Core i7 975 will be miles ahead compared to a mechanical drive + 980X. That's what I am saving for next hehe
Wouldn't a 32nm quad core i7 be much more useful than the 6 core? It would most likely clock to the moon and programs could actually use all the cores.
Or at least a W3680. Same stock price as 980X, but apparently better memory controller.If you need a 980X, then you should be getting a X5650 x 2 on a 5520 chipset, and bling out 24t.
im still in debate on that.
id rather run raptors disks in raid 0 then have an SSD.
You almost see 0 gaming performance. And i bet you the raptors will have a longer MTBF time then the SSD's will.
But then again im a gamer.
Also the only time an SSD system beats me is at windows loadup and its not by much.
A few seconds... however i have 3x the storage they do at the same price.
OP, a 980X is never worth it.
980X like all EE Chips is something u want, never need.
If you need a 980X, then you should be getting a X5650 x 2 on a 5520 chipset, and bling out 24t.
vs a 975?
Not an upgrade... a side grade...
Tell me how your gonna get a noticable improvement in just having a larger cache?
True the 32nm scale better, but they are also a ton more fragile.
The 975 is an awesome chip, in fact its the longest i7 i had in shelf life only to be replaced by two gulftowns.
Rolling under the deck laughing...
Have you used even a single SSD?
Does not sound like you have. All I can say is damn! There! You got me cursing!
I was put off and not so much an early adopter to SSD with the controller issues (Jmicron anyone?) and seemingly finite life...
Now that has passed all I can say is if you do SSD right there is no going back. No you don't need a fancy $3000 RAID controller (but it's required if you have special requirements with large numbers of disks, etc.). I have a system with a single Intel X25M G2 160GB and it puts any raid array to shame whether made up with raptors or 15K SAS disks.
I have systems running with single velociraptors and Raptor-Xs (the silly window ones) and frankly those drives are steaming piles of rattling monkey beans compared to a single X25M. The two systems side by side is like an old Zeos 486DX vs. a Dell Vostro 220s with a Conroe! There is no comparison. None, nada, zip. Does not matter if you game or not. With a high performance system (especially with 6 cores!) you are doing your CPU a big dis-service by having those slow drives hitched to it. It's like taking 10 slow pills before you start your work day. Speaking of work day at the end of the day I cannot see how someone can afford NOT to have an SSD in a top of the line system! It makes no sense whatsoever.
MTBF? Not a problem either. The drive will outlast several generations of sockets/chipsets and of course SSDs will improve too.
As far as 32nm being fragile I don't see them being any more fragile than Nehalem 45nm parts. You lost an ES chip which were high leakage parts. Enthusiasts loved them because you could goose the voltage while filling your LN2 pots and crash through 6+ GHz like a Ginsu that's been sitting out in the Caribbean sun - slices through butter.
The retail parts are solid. Of course (as with other chips of the past) they certainly WILL die if you get silly with vcore/vtt. That's a mathematical certainty.
Thank you very much for ranting that so I didn't have to. To even consider a Gulftown without an SSD is shocking.
I see SSDs like the jump to Dual-Cores, to gigahertz CPUs, or real GPUs with T&L.
Everything before it just pales in comparison, and the only people who don't agree are those who haven't made the jump....
I haven't made the jump. And for several very valid reasons.
1) The SSD is even today MUCH less dependable than a good quality HD, I have heard so many stories. And I do NOT like re-installing 20-30 games, programs, settings, and such. It takes weeks. The benefit is mostly boot times. I leave my computers on 24/7, so I never see that. Everything else is so fast, who cares.
2) Cost. enough said on this point.
I haven't made the jump. And for several very valid reasons.
1) The SSD is even today MUCH less dependable than a good quality HD, I have heard so many stories. And I do NOT like re-installing 20-30 games, programs, settings, and such. It takes weeks. The benefit is mostly boot times. I leave my computers on 24/7, so I never see that. Everything else is so fast, who cares.
2) Cost. enough said on this point.
Reliability is less? That's just a farce. There's a lot of PEBKAC killing drives. Let me tell you if I cannot kill one that is saying a lot and I mean a lot!
Stories - let me tell you how that works. If a million people have something and 990,000 of them work without issue and the other 10,000 fail the 10,000 that fail WILL complain. It will appear that it's a POS because well that's a lot of stories, right? Most folks that are working aren't squawking. That works with just about anything...
If you do nothing but leave them on 24/7 and download workers then sure no benefit.
Whether you use mechanical drives or not you should ALWAYS have a disc image policy in place. No more taking days [sic] to get your ducks in order.
I've always had the need for extremely high IOPS. In the past this was done with dozens - sometimes 100s of 15K drives. Noise and heat, etc. And failures.
Today a box with 20 SSD can do the work of a room full of loud mechanical drives.
They are definitely a boon for portable users - longer battery life, faster and durable.
Oh and speaking of durable!!! These things will take a beating that NO other mechanical drive can! Including being completely submersed in sea water for over 24 hours!![]()
Recommendations ? (lets not derail this thread, just one reply maybe)
I don't know how you managed to justify purchasing an i7 965 in the first place, but having six cores vs. four certainly could make sense if you are running software that utilizes them.
AT review covers that pretty well here.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/2960
As for SSDs, thanx Rubycon, for saying what needs to be said.
To me, including for games, SSDs are easily the most important part in a high end rig these days.
It's baffling hearing people argue against them, as quite frankly, you'd have to be a ridiculously simple/basic user to not appreciate the amazing difference even a cheaper Indilinx SSD makes.
And even simply doing things like installing a program or launching your web browser or iTunes, things the most basic users do, i don't see how one cannot notice the improvement & marvel.