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I disagree. The system I have now(built in 2013) is way better then the system I built in 2004.If I could time travel and show the 1994 Me a 2004 system, I would be blown away. If I was shown a 2014 system in 2004, I'd be like "Cool, when is that coming out? Next year or in two years?".
Compared to AMD's Athlon 64 X2 the situation gets a lot more competitive, but AMD still doesn't stand a chance. The Core 2 Extreme X6800, Core 2 Duo E6700 and E6600 were pretty consistently in the top 3 or 4 spots in each benchmark, with the E6600 offering better performance than AMD's FX-62 flagship in the vast majority of benchmarks. Another way of looking at it is that Intel's Core 2 Duo E6600 is effectively a $316 FX-62, which doesn't sound bad at all.
They do hit different markets, but yeah, ultrabooks are becoming very popular. I for one won't buy another laptop much over 3 lbs. In fact, my goal is closer to 2 lbs.
Interestingly, that means no current MacBook Pro meets that criterion, as all of them are 3.5 lbs or more. The MacBook Airs fit the bill at under 3 lbs for a 13", but I don't like the screens on those, so I haven't bought one of those either. Then there is the 12" MacBook which meets the form factor I've been lusting after for years and the screen on it is beautiful, but I don't like its keyboard so much and I would prefer to have more than one USB port. But it's oh so light at 2 lbs. Even with the slower Core M CPU, I'd buy one in a heartbeat if it had a higher travel keyboard.
So, I will be waiting for the 2016 revamp of the MacBook Pro 13" and the MacBook 12" version 2. I betcha the MBP 13" will come in at a shade over 3 lbs, not much more than the current MacBook Air. My dilemma will be whether I can stand the much higher weight of the MacBook Pro (even though that weight will likely be only a little over 3 lbs I'm predicting) or if I can stand the low travel keyboard of the MacBook.
BTW, I use my iPad Air 2 more than my laptop, and that thing is less than 1 lb. That is a tough act to follow in terms of weight.
For a laptop to match my 5930K desktop I'd need to spend thousands. I've scrapped laptops. The low end is junk with 720p screens and no SSD and $1500 on an Ultrabook, I'd rather buy a 4G prepaid tablet instead for $250. $1500 is desktop money not laptop money.
I do it on my work Thinkpad T540p.Would you be doing video encoding and running an FTP server on your laptop too?
They do hit different markets, but yeah, ultrabooks are becoming very popular. I for one won't buy another laptop much over 3 lbs. In fact, my goal is closer to 2 lbs.
Interestingly, that means no current MacBook Pro meets that criterion, as all of them are 3.5 lbs or more. The MacBook Airs fit the bill at under 3 lbs for a 13", but I don't like the screens on those, so I haven't bought one of those either. Then there is the 12" MacBook which meets the form factor I've been lusting after for years and the screen on it is beautiful, but I don't like its keyboard so much and I would prefer to have more than one USB port. But it's oh so light at 2 lbs. Even with the slower Core M CPU, I'd buy one in a heartbeat if it had a higher travel keyboard.
So, I will be waiting for the 2016 revamp of the MacBook Pro 13" and the MacBook 12" version 2. I betcha the MBP 13" will come in at a shade over 3 lbs, not much more than the current MacBook Air. My dilemma will be whether I can stand the much higher weight of the MacBook Pro (even though that weight will likely be only a little over 3 lbs I'm predicting) or if I can stand the low travel keyboard of the MacBook.
BTW, I use my iPad Air 2 more than my laptop, and that thing is less than 1 lb. That is a tough act to follow in terms of weight.
I bought an E6300 Conroe in late 2006 and overclocked it to 2.86ghz and used it till 2013. I paired it with an HD3000 (can't remember if it was a 3850 or 3570) and when that died a GTX460 768mb. It was starting to show it's age by then and I bought a laptop with an i5-4200u and GT730m.Ah, the C2D E6750. That was the one. I spent $200 on that thing and it carried me to Sandy Bridge. I'm still using the Sandy. I've bought two processors over the course of ten years.
Have you looked at the HP Spectre 13? It's 2.45lb and 10mm thick. It's beautiful in person. http://store.hp.com/us/en/ContentVi...cons/nextgen/premiumlaptops/shopspectrelaptop
Way better looking than MacBooks, IMO.
It's interesting to peruse the Best Buy website for entry-level desktops in their current back-to-school sale. On the Intel side, they're mostly Pentiums, which provide Core 2 Duo level performance.
I dunno, if you just regularly go to the laptops section, the top result is a Dell with an Broadwell-U i3 for $329; and there's also an HP with the A10-9600P for $40 more.
Would you be doing video encoding and running an FTP server on your laptop too?
Takes me down memory lane. I couldn't afford a new Intel platform and just upgraded my Athlon 64 3200+ to the X2 4400+. Went all out on that build. Even sleeved all my wiring, including the PSU.
Found my old write up (on another site) of my build. Here's a pic of the beast. Loved that box! I have that processor sitting on my desktop to this day. Memories! :whiste:
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http://www.anandtech.com/show/10525...onroe-moores-law-is-dead-long-live-moores-law
Wow, 10 years. Crazy that there's been so little progress since then:
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Not even a doubling in single-thread performance in 10 years, and only a 4-fold improvement in multithreaded. For comparison, 10 years before Conroe, we were still at 200MHz Pentium Pro- imagine if the last 10 years had seen as much improvement as the 10 before!
It's like the 90s of clothing... so colorful. I still have a Q6600 box that's similar. Blue motherboard, green GPU, copper heat sinks, multi-colored neon connectors, etc. It can still run 3.51ghz stable too. Used to be able to do 3.6ghz which was amazing for a Q6600, but it's no longer the young energetic chip it used to be.
I had a Celeron 366. Although not as consistently as the 300@450, some of those things could hit 550 MHz (although I didn't do that). Even better though is that I used that same Asus P2B mobo all the way up to 1.4 GHz stock with a Celeron Tualatin.A Q6600 was amazing back in the day. You touched a peak that stock chips didn't touch for years.
Legendary OCing CPUs:
-Celeron 300A
-Q6600
-2500k
Energy = $$$$$
Look at a phone, tablet or ultrabook from now vs. 10 years ago.
Yeah...![]()
It's like the 90s of clothing... so colorful. I still have a Q6600 box that's similar. Blue motherboard, green GPU, copper heat sinks, multi-colored neon connectors, etc. It can still run 3.51ghz stable too. Used to be able to do 3.6ghz which was amazing for a Q6600, but it's no longer the young energetic chip it used to be.
If talking about overclocked even a $186 E6300 demolished the entire A64 lineup considering at stock 1.86GHz it was already matching or beating 2.6GHz X2s in games. The only saving grace for AMD that time after the inevitable CPU price cuts was cheap A64 mobos and DDR1.