Machiavegli
Member
- Jul 5, 2013
- 27
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And where is your graph showing the Pentium likewise on Low? Please support that none of BF3's graphics settings have any effect on CPU load.
is it the cpus fault if the game microstutters? or the programmers? for gpu I can see the difference but cpu c'mon...Its not just the 10fps but micro stuttering which happens less with Intel cpus. TR did an article about cpu affecting framerate latencies and bulldozer did badly. Piledriver seemed to improve it but its its still a drawback. http://techreport.com/review/23750/a...sor-reviewed/5
that isnt necessarily the truth, unless you are comparing something like perf/watt or the same clock speeds then an amd 4ghz core can be faster than an intel 2ghz one...each AMD core is significantly slower than each i5/i7 core,
when gpu limited I am sure the intel advantage is marginalized, and you can cherry pick skyrim or civ5 with outdated engines and it still wont mean anything, or better yet, it mean that extra $100-300 could have gotten you a better set of components, something deep pocket intel fanboys dont seem to understand.If it was only 10 FPS it wouldn't be the most popular and most recommended by reviewers for gaming chip on the market. But I think we all knew that
Another place AMD is a good value is low to mid range laptops. I recently picked up a laptop with an A8-4500m, for $339. And wow, it does great. It plays SWTOR decently for example. StarCraft 2 and Diablo both look great and run fast. Same with WoW and EQ2.
You just can't get that for $339 with Intel inside.
The thing is Intel processors have lower TDP and consumption with a bit more performance, but are more expensive, from $20, $50 to $100 more expensive.
I'd say the FX6300 right now is great value, but if you want lower the FX 4300 is very good overclocked and will beat the I3 2100 in multithreaded applications.
for $339 I think you can't go wrong with that, definitely AMD have nice GPUs, when they released llano I thought they would gain more ground on mobile than what they did...
but I would also mention that the HD 4000 can probably also play those games, I've played SWTOR on the HD 2000 and with low settings it was OK with laptop res, HD 4000 should have easily 3x that performance I guess,
The Celerons and Pentiums in the non-ultrabooks are ~HD2000/2500 missing Quicksync.
quicksync is used for video transcoding, not gaming.
you can buy for around $400 laptops with the HD 4000 (i3 3110M) and quicksync if that's what you need.
My point was that HD2000/2500 is not HD 4000.
While they are being cleared out for Haswell. We have yet to see what graphics Haswell entry level Celeron and Pentium will get in terms of graphics.
I will try XBMC with my Mini-itx A4-4000 and report back in the weekend.
AMD A4-4000
Asrock FM2A85-ITX
2x 4GB DDR-3 1333MHz 1.55v
256GB OCZ Vertex 4
Mini-iTX slim case with 120W PSU.
Windows 8 Pro 64bit
Logitech k400 Wireless keyboard with mouse pad.
Idle = 19W
XBMC Playing 22GB BattleShip @ 1080p H264 DTS-HD = 29-32W
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AMD A4-4000
Asrock FM2A85-ITX
2x 4GB DDR-3 1333MHz 1.55v
256GB OCZ Vertex 4
Mini-iTX slim case with 120W PSU.
Windows 8 Pro 64bit
Logitech k400 Wireless keyboard with mouse pad.
Idle = 19W
XBMC Playing 22GB BattleShip @ 1080p H264 DTS-HD = 29-32W
The only reason to purchase Intel CPUs back in the day, was to overclock them. I would buy cheap pentium dual cores and just blast away. That was crazy good performance for the $$.
Now, performance/$ ratio wise, Intel doesn't stand a chance. And honestly, this should be the most important aspect.
I see SO MANY idiots do this all the time. They're "gaming", so they get a 3770k/4770k, and their video card is a Radeon 7770 or a GTX 650ti... Because that's all they could afford... Herp derp.

Why am I reminded of an old beer commercial?: "Tastes great!" "Less filling!"
Awesome, now could you try running that in 60fps through SmoothVideo Project? Has a benchmark tool also...
http://www.svp-team.com/
There is no need to frame those individuals in such a derogatory light.
There are legitimate reasons why one might decide to invest into a cpu-heavy setup to start, with the trade-off being that you have less to spend at first on your GPU or SSD, with the plan being that you have a solid bedrock of a computer to upgrade down the road.
Pull out that 650ti and replace it with a $400 video card next year and you've got a hell of an upgrade and a gaming rig that will keep on delivering for a couple more years.
The same can't be said of the overclocked budget CPU build that is already pushed to the limit to make today's GPU perform with today's games.
Not that it costs more to upgrade the CPU than it does the GPU, but I can upgrade my GPU and not have to deal with the pain of reinstalling my OS, all my apps, and my games, and setting up all my shortcuts again, etc etc, like I would if I upgraded my CPU/mobo.
Just sayen I get that its not the upgrade path of choice for you, but there's no reason to be so negative on the people who might prefer that kind of an upgrade path.
AMD A4-4000
Asrock FM2A85-ITX
2x 4GB DDR-3 1333MHz 1.55v
256GB OCZ Vertex 4
Mini-iTX slim case with 120W PSU.
Windows 8 Pro 64bit
Logitech k400 Wireless keyboard with mouse pad.
Idle = 19W
XBMC Playing 22GB BattleShip @ 1080p H264 DTS-HD = 29-32W
![]()
Is that with a 120W pico-PSU??
Well... I counted 3 for AMD, 0 for intel and 2 draws.
Comparing AMDs 8 core to intels 4? It is like comparing civic to corvette on public road... both will go with 55mph(?speedlimit in US?). Or do you have any data indicating all 8 cores were utilized?
If you are NOT going to use higher quality graphics why get an inferior dual core CPU + dGPU ??![]()
