I'd love to hear your explanation of that statement."And even though the chip is oc'ed to a speed of 2ghz, it will not function on par with a packaged 2ghz chip..."
I'd love to hear your explanation of that statement."And even though the chip is oc'ed to a speed of 2ghz, it will not function on par with a packaged 2ghz chip..."
???And even though the chip is oc'ed to a speed of 2ghz, it will not function on par with a packaged 2ghz chip...
Originally posted by: merlocka
nForce2 might change things, but after getting my a$$ kicked by VIA motherboard problems on the systems I've built for people the last couple years I'll pass on AMD for now. My personal A7V with T bird has been pretty stable, but I've had my share of SBlive troubles with it.
I still can't believe that I ever replaced BX boards with VIA boards. Someone shoot me.
Originally posted by: Booster
I tend to agree that AMD became not a performance leader, but the best bang for the buck value solution right now. It's better price/performance-wise to get an Athlon XP for the same money than a severely crippled P4 Celeron. Plus, you get an uncrippled CPU that's a lot more pleasant to own, IMO. It would take some time before the ClawHammer arrives that AMD will become the performance and value leader once again. And I agree that VIA chipsets aren't the best and they're killing AMD sales. Some of them are/were pretty good (VIA Apollo Pro133A/T, KT266A), others are suck (Apollo Pro133, KT133A, KT266). I think SIS is a whole lot better now.
Whats with the debate about AMD vs Intel in the PRICE/PERFORMANCE segment? - AMD is the clear WINNER
Originally posted by: guapo337
Originally posted by: FishTankX
To unlock the true performance of the AthlonXP, you must use high quality RAM (266 CL2/333 CL2) and the Via KT266A/KT333 chipset. And you know the general sentiment on Via. Via has too many problems.. and bugs.. and headaches..
personally, i have NO IDEA where the "via is bad" sentiment comes from.. i have a shuttle ak31a kt266a motherboard, and i have to have a problem that is the chipset's fault.
Originally posted by: Gog
Alrighty folks, here is another benchmark to put this debate finally to rest.
BENCHMARK
Look under the 3dmark2001se 10x7x32. The overclocked 1.6a at 2.1ghz scores 6816. Their benchmark machine is running a relatively new and competitive chipset (compared to my antiquated 760), the SiS645. They ran their test using a Geforce 3 ti 200 at stock speeds. My setup at the same resolution scores about 6900.
So there you go, I believe I proved my point. Why bother buying a more expensive chip (the 1.6a) and spend time overclocking it just to end up with performance below a chip that is less expensive, the Athlon XP 2000+!!!🙂😉
VIVA AMD !!!