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.
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.
