3DVagabond
Lifer
This^
Anyone who is naive enough to think that competition isn't a major contributor to pricing and tech advancement needs to go back to school. The days of companies charging a fair price have been gone for decades.
without amd,
we would had to chose between a pention 32bits or a itanium 64
memory controler would still be at nortbridge
have fun with your singre core +ht
igps would suck even more
Do you seriously think that by now intel would not have been able to figure out all of those things above? Being first does not mean that the other guy would not have brought it to market, maybe in a different way sure...22nm chips coming out next year and no Intergrated memory controller, yeah sure I can buy that🙄
One answer to this is what IDC said in another thread. Even without competition Intel would still need to compete with their own products. Sell the current gen too high and the vast majority of people would rather stick with what they got.
Do you seriously think that by now intel would not have been able to figure out all of those things above? Being first does not mean that the other guy would not have brought it to market, maybe in a different way sure...22nm chips coming out next year and no Intergrated memory controller, yeah sure I can buy that🙄
Then why bother with GNOME/Unity? Try a different desktop environment such as KDE or Xfce. Even a different distro such as openSUSE or Fedora. As for software, are you stuck with particular programs, or do you just need anything to do a particular job? And the loading times for me are much quicker on Linux than Windoze for me.I last used Ubuntu 11.4 and it's still not as responsive as my Win7 setup. This has been one of my primary issues with linux, on top of not being able to run any of the software I use for business or entertainment. I've also measured cross platform apps to be notably slower at loading under Ubuntu. Not sure if this is different with Debian or some other distro, but just my experience.
So why are you crazy enough to only stick with Ubuntu? openSUSE is every bit as good, and at least as easy to use.on the linux front - every few months or so, i try and get used to the newest ubuntu with virtualbox. there's always something that frustrates the hell out of me. last time around, was having to jump through hoops just to install handbrake as there was no precompiled file. gave up after seeing it was a 2 page guide on how to do it!
made things simpler now. anything at all that requires me to go into terminal = stop, try again in a year. gonna guess i'll be a windows boy for a fair bit longer in that case.
From the end user perspective it sounds way complicated, think about it -Gnome/Unity/KDE/XFCE/SUSE/Fedora/Bla bla bla, never mind Win7 Home ftwThen why bother with GNOME/Unity? Try a different desktop environment such as KDE or Xfce. Even a different distro such as openSUSE or Fedora. As for software, are you stuck with particular programs, or do you just need anything to do a particular job? And the loading times for me are much quicker on Linux than Windoze for me.
So why are you crazy enough to only stick with Ubuntu? openSUSE is every bit as good, and at least as easy to use.
But even with lack of competition, Intel gives us an incredible value.
a 990X for $1,000
So whenever I hear people claiming that the reason our CPUs nowadays are fantastic is due to AMD's competition and without it we'd be doomed, I chuckle.
We are seeing the Intel monopoly. If AMD was a competent CPU maker the i5 2500k would be $100.
Specious reasoning. The i5 2500K is not a high-volume part that ends up in the hands of a lot of people or a lot of people's pre-built computers. As such, no, it would not be $100.. whether AMD was competent or not.
It's called the used market, sm625.
This. Given extremely good competition the absolute cheapest the 2500K was gonna end up was $180. People still need to remember it's a Performance market part.
I last used Ubuntu 11.4 and it's still not as responsive as my Win7 setup. This has been one of my primary issues with linux, on top of not being able to run any of the software I use for business or entertainment. I've also measured cross platform apps to be notably slower at loading under Ubuntu. Not sure if this is different with Debian or some other distro, but just my experience.
Well, if BD really destroyed SB by a huge margin, then I bet Intel would have reduced pricing even more.
You can really only expect amazing bang-for-buck sometimes from the GPU division. *Looks at Radeon HD 4850 and HD 4870*.
That only happens if they want to win some marketshare after not so good generation.
Best cards in history of ATi - 9700/9500 pro series which came after Nvidia ti 4200 generation where ATI was barely known.
X800GTO - nvidia was kicking their ass with 6 series gpus
X1800GTO - was ati stop gap solution to combat 7600gt/7800gt
2900 pro 256bit - amazing value but only because they wanted to get rid of chips after 2900xt fiasco and before introducing 38x0 series
48x0 - good card at good price coming after lackluster generations kinda like 9700 😉
pricing on 5 series cards were nowhere near as atractive and 5830 unlike it's predecessor like X800GTO/X1800GTO didn't unlock which probably isn't coincidence given AMD rule of gpu market at that time.