IVY Bridge i3 & Pentium now available @ newegg.com

Smoblikat

Diamond Member
Nov 19, 2011
5,184
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Whats up with HD2500?

Those prices are very delicious looking though.

Whats the TDp on those two models? Better not be 77w.

Found it:
Non T is 55w, T is 35w.
 

Gigantopithecus

Diamond Member
Dec 14, 2004
7,664
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I just ordered an i3-3220. I currently have a Silverstone Temjin TJ08B-E and I'm hoping the lower power consumption vs. the i3-2120 will let me run it with a fanless tower cooler (a Zerotherm ZT-10D). With my fanless Seasonic PSU, my system will then have only one fan - a low rpm 180mm. The i3-2120 gets close to be able to do this, but hits 60-65C under sustained load which is a bit too hot for my comfort. If the i3-3220 will hit 55-60C, I'll be set.

That G2120 is a lot of performance for $100.
 

pantsaregood

Senior member
Feb 13, 2011
993
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I'd expect the G2120 to drop in price unless Intel intends to release a lower end model Pentium.
 

Stoneburner

Diamond Member
May 29, 2003
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I was just looking to modify my HTPC setup. I CAN'T find performance information for these anywhere.
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
14,003
3,362
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Too expensive, we'll get 5-10% more performance for the same price as last year. The only positive is the lower power consumption but like in GPUs, 2012 is becoming the worst year for both CPU and GPU upgrades.
 

jpiniero

Lifer
Oct 1, 2010
16,574
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I was just looking to modify my HTPC setup. I CAN'T find performance information for these anywhere.

The NDA probably hasn't expired yet. You could always look at any DC Sandy review for cpu performance (speeds for the normal models hasn't changed, so it'd only be 5% faster) and any Ivy review of the HD 2500/4000 for gpu performance.

Too expensive, we'll get 5-10% more performance for the same price as last year.

The T models did get a nice bump. 2.5/2.6 to 2.8/2.9.
 
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Puppies04

Diamond Member
Apr 25, 2011
5,909
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Too expensive, we'll get 5-10% more performance for the same price as last year. The only positive is the lower power consumption but like in GPUs, 2012 is becoming the worst year for both CPU and GPU upgrades.

Could you be a bit more negative?

5-10% performance increase for the same price, yeah thats terrible.... of course 99.5% of consumers purchasing this product will be upgrading from something decidedly more ancient than SB so your point is just about completly invalid.
 

NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,424
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Any word on the i3-3225? HD4000 graphics might make for a decent HTPC chip.
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
14,003
3,362
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Could you be a bit more negative?

5-10% performance increase for the same price, yeah thats terrible.... of course 99.5% of consumers purchasing this product will be upgrading from something decidedly more ancient than SB so your point is just about completly invalid.

Im talking about people already own a SandyBridge Core i3/Pentium or Last year's AMD HD6xxx & NVIDIA GTX5xx GPUs.

Same as FX over Phenom II and IB Core i5/i7 over SB.
 

Puppies04

Diamond Member
Apr 25, 2011
5,909
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Im talking about people already own a SandyBridge Core i3/Pentium or Last year's AMD HD6xxx & NVIDIA GTX5xx GPUs.

Same as FX over Phenom II and IB Core i5/i7 over SB.

The fact that you think Phenom II > FX is even remotely similar to SB > IB, tells me that this really isn't a conversation worth having.
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
14,003
3,362
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The fact that you think Phenom II > FX is even remotely similar to SB > IB, tells me that this really isn't a conversation worth having.

I dont care what you believe, the fact is that from a Phenom II/SB to FX/IB is not worth it (from performance stand point). Both cases gives you 5-10% more performance on average, it is pointless to upgrade as with this years GPUs, unless you really like to have the latest hardware.
 

Lepton87

Platinum Member
Jul 28, 2009
2,544
9
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I just ordered an i3-3220. I currently have a Silverstone Temjin TJ08B-E and I'm hoping the lower power consumption vs. the i3-2120 will let me run it with a fanless tower cooler (a Zerotherm ZT-10D). With my fanless Seasonic PSU, my system will then have only one fan - a low rpm 180mm. The i3-2120 gets close to be able to do this, but hits 60-65C under sustained load which is a bit too hot for my comfort. If the i3-3220 will hit 55-60C, I'll be set.

That G2120 is a lot of performance for $100.

Unless you want your CPUs to last over 30 years you're being silly. Just think about it, TJ max for SB is 97C, at TJ max any SB CPU should last about 10years, every 10C temperature drop about doubles effective life of a chip. Do you really need your CPUs to last that long?
 
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skipsneeky2

Diamond Member
May 21, 2011
5,035
1
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Lower power consumption,better graphics,faster stock clockspeeds.:thumbsup:

Having owned a i3 2100 with hd2000,i was able to play some games like Battlefield 2 at 1600x1200 without much issue,heck back in the day you needed like a freaking 6800 ultra to be able to run such a resolution.

HD2500 won't be a powerhouse gpu,but hey we are increasing ipc,while getting onboard graphics improvements should excite some people.
 

Magic Carpet

Diamond Member
Oct 2, 2011
3,477
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The i3-2120 gets close to be able to do this, but hits 60-65C under sustained load which is a bit too hot for my comfort. If the i3-3220 will hit 55-60C, I'll be set..

Unless you want your CPUs to last over 30 years you're being silly. Just think about it, TJ max for SB is 97C, at TJ max any SB CPU should last about 10years, every 10C temperature drop about doubles effective life of a chip. Do you really need your CPUs to last that long?
I think, the key word here is "comfort". Everybody's different with that :)
 

Lonbjerg

Diamond Member
Dec 6, 2009
4,419
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Ability to do some light gaming. :)

The number of people buying these CPU's with the intent of gaming anything else but "facebook" games are so small that their numbers don't justify wasting CPU die space on a bigger IGP in the big picture.

The crowd cheering for bigger IGP's are far too loud compared to the demand...and their numbers.
 

Gigantopithecus

Diamond Member
Dec 14, 2004
7,664
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The number of people buying these CPU's with the intent of gaming anything else but "facebook" games are so small that their numbers don't justify wasting CPU die space on a bigger IGP in the big picture.

The crowd cheering for bigger IGP's are far too loud compared to the demand...and their numbers.

I've sold a lot of A6/A8 systems to people who want to play older titles. Granted those APUs' IGPs are a lot more capable than these IB IGPs, but the demand is there, at least in my experience.
 

NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,424
5,738
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The number of people buying these CPU's with the intent of gaming anything else but "facebook" games are so small that their numbers don't justify wasting CPU die space on a bigger IGP in the big picture.

The crowd cheering for bigger IGP's are far too loud compared to the demand...and their numbers.

The amount of die space for the iGPU is the same on all Ivy Bridge chips. The number of shaders etc. enabled is the difference. Intel could enable far more i3s with full HD4000 if they wanted to.
 

The Alias

Senior member
Aug 22, 2012
646
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I don't see the appeal in buying an ib platform over an apu platform for htpc especially if you're considering light gaming
 

Gigantopithecus

Diamond Member
Dec 14, 2004
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I don't see the appeal in buying an ib platform over an apu platform for htpc especially if you're considering light gaming

Drop-in upgradability is one major selling point. There is a lot of room to go up from an IB PDC or i3; there is no room to go up from an A8-3870K.