Currently running an antiquated rig I built in 2003, Northwood 2.4GHz/1 GB DDR/GF4. Finally getting around to upgrading this summer and am looking for advice on which of the two popular Intel chips, E8400 and Q6600, is best suited for my needs.
I'm only a light gamer; more than anything, I'm looking for the system that will feel most responsive in simple day-to-day multitasking (browser, Winamp, MS Word, etc.). Probably the most demanding thing I'll be throwing at this rig on a regular basis is Photoshop CS3; I'm curious as to whether quad-core will give an appreciable advantage there.
Given that I'm not big into gaming, it would seem perhaps the quad-core is the way to go, but the greater heat and 65nm process are drawbacks. Also, I haven't read up much on the current outlook for CPU's/chipsets, but if this is a situation where I could easily grab a yet-to-be-released 3.0GHz quad-core as a $130 upgrade within 18-24 months, I'm definitely not opposed to going with the 8400 for now if it's the faster option for today's non-quad-optimized software.
Thoughts?
I'm only a light gamer; more than anything, I'm looking for the system that will feel most responsive in simple day-to-day multitasking (browser, Winamp, MS Word, etc.). Probably the most demanding thing I'll be throwing at this rig on a regular basis is Photoshop CS3; I'm curious as to whether quad-core will give an appreciable advantage there.
Given that I'm not big into gaming, it would seem perhaps the quad-core is the way to go, but the greater heat and 65nm process are drawbacks. Also, I haven't read up much on the current outlook for CPU's/chipsets, but if this is a situation where I could easily grab a yet-to-be-released 3.0GHz quad-core as a $130 upgrade within 18-24 months, I'm definitely not opposed to going with the 8400 for now if it's the faster option for today's non-quad-optimized software.
Thoughts?