Wait for Trinity or build Llano system now?

JimmiG

Platinum Member
Feb 24, 2005
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I'm looking to build a cheap, small virtualization "server" for labs and for teaching myself.

I was thinking about going with the AMD A6 3670K (2.7 GHz Quad), 16GB oF RAM and a uATX case+mobo. That would give me 4 cores, hardware virtualization and built-in graphics so I don't need to get a video card just for the first 45 minutes of setting the system up (before moving it into the closet and only connecting via RDP). Per-core performance isn't very important and I doubt I would need more than 4 cores.

However with Trinity just around the corner, should I wait? Will that affect CPUs <$90 too (most information seems to be about the 4+GHz models)? Maybe even more price drops are coming (though these CPUs are ridiculously cheap for Quad-core already).

As for my main system, I'll wait until Haswell comes out, this is just a secndary system for playing around with virtualization, Linux and Windows Server and to have something low-power I can run 24/7.
 

daveybrat

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jan 31, 2000
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I'd rather have a Trinity for low power then. Some of the Trinity Quad's will be 100Watt just like Llano, but some models will be 65Watt. A 65Watt Quad-core with nice graphics sounds like a winner for you.

And don't forget, FM2 socket should have a longer lifeline than FM1 socket which is already dead.
 

Centauri

Golden Member
Dec 10, 2002
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Not waiting a week for Trinity at this point would be silly. Unless of course you're counting on snapping up cheap Llano tech in the aftermath.
 

SPBHM

Diamond Member
Sep 12, 2012
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I don't have to much experience with visualization, but the A10 will cost $135,
you can buy the 8120 for maybe $30 more, wouldn't it be a lot better with 8 threads for virtual machines?

also, you can get a cheap MB with 760-880G, if you don't need a lot of GPU power it should work!?

but at the moment, if you can wait for trinity, it might be worth it compared to llano...
 

beginner99

Diamond Member
Jun 2, 2009
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What do you mean with "Labs and for myself"?

for me that sounds like "will barley be used much" but I might be wrong. What will you do on those VMs?

I just have the feeling you will be I/O limited mainly. Eg. get the cheapest dual-core (eg pentium 620g or similar, has a GPU in it too) and invest money saved in better storage (speak ssd) or at least 1 hdd per VM.

Runnign multiple VMs from same HDD -> You will feel that a lot more than running 4 of them on a dual-core.
 

jaydee

Diamond Member
May 6, 2000
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Llano or Trinity both seem like the wrong tool for the job. Main benefit is very good on-chip graphics, and they will be completely wasted...
 

Fox5

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
5,957
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What do you mean with "Labs and for myself"?

for me that sounds like "will barley be used much" but I might be wrong. What will you do on those VMs?

I just have the feeling you will be I/O limited mainly. Eg. get the cheapest dual-core (eg pentium 620g or similar, has a GPU in it too) and invest money saved in better storage (speak ssd) or at least 1 hdd per VM.

Runnign multiple VMs from same HDD -> You will feel that a lot more than running 4 of them on a dual-core.

Depends on what he's doing.
The cheap AMD hardware might have more/better virtualization extensions than the cheap Intel hardware, though?