With all this back and forth and back and forth, it is getting to the point where someone trying to find non-bias opinion and information, both pro and con, feels like saying "f***K it, I am going to buy what is within my budget and if it works for what I do 95% of the time, great.

It seems to me that 95% of the current processors in today's market can do everything and anything a computer user would like it to do whether it is as an HTPC, Office machine, office/media machine and gaming machine. The major problem to me is if you're a high end gamer and want all settings set to the highest settings and lowest power utilization curve while gaming then emptying the wallet for Intel parts is the way to go.
Some of us are not high end gamers and would like some information of what the pro's and con's of FM2+, FM2, and AM3+ especially with all the upgrades in the motherboards for some sockets. Compared to Kaveri and Richland, is AM3+ still a contender as a budget system or should everyone forget about AM3+ since the chipset is so old in technology terms.
Technically, I thought this is where I could find info about Kaveri as far as it relates to what kind of upgrades and improvements does it have compared to
similar priced cpu's. Is it better than Richland or Trinity or LLano in terms of evolution? Is it better than FX 4300 with a dGPU? What improvements do FM2+ bring to the table? With Kaveri do I need a dGPU for a set of applications or is the IGPU ok?
Will AMD offer an Athlon II X4 style Kaveri in the future? Is it a big step up or incremental step in improvements compared to the previous generations of APU? Which Kaveri APU is the best balance between capability and cost if I am interested in upgrading? What is the total cost in buying an AMD system vs an Intel?
