dave_the_nerd
Lifer
You look like King Lear: he believes that because he was abused by his daughters, everyone's troubles must come from their daughters (Act 3, scene 3, search for the line "pelican daughters").
I was not expecting that. 😵
You look like King Lear: he believes that because he was abused by his daughters, everyone's troubles must come from their daughters (Act 3, scene 3, search for the line "pelican daughters").
I see what you are saying about failing parts. However that is just the CPU?I don't think the reason for Xeons is really that complicated. Think about it this way: when you're running a private server for a couple of friends, a part failing is annoying and costs you $120 to replace (I figure no part of a very basic i3 server costs more than that).
If a large business has their server fail, they are out thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of dollars. They still have to pay the employees for showing up, but the employees can't be productive or work. Time is literally money.
For example, if Anandtech's servers crashed, they would lose a considerable amount of money in due to lost ad revenue as people migrate somewhere else for tech news (perhaps permanently).
This money easily exceeds the cost of even several Xeons--all of which are necessary to deliver content to consumers. Anandtech hundred of thousands of people--that requires far more than a home server, which only needs to connect to 1-2 devices at once.
Now, these parts CAN be used for gaming, but there would be no benefit. Gamers don't require the dozens of threads or terabytes of RAM that servers do, and they see no benefit from ECC protection in RAM.
So, in a way, you are right--there is no point FOR YOU or for any gamer to get a Xeon. A 3570K is a much better purchase since games depends more on clockspeed than threads. BUT there are uses for Xeons.
You're basically arguing that "I have never seen a need for Xeons, thus nobody needs them." You look like King Lear: he believes that because he was abused by his daughters, everyone's troubles must come from their daughters (Act 3, scene 3, search for the line "pelican daughters").
I would have to see one in action.
I assume no one here has one then not even the cheap ones.
I see what you are saying about failing parts. However that is just the CPU?
Intel makes motherboards and I have read some reviews that some are actually pretty poor.
So ok you buy a quality Xeon CPU so hopefully it doesn't fail. What about the motherboard? If the motherboard dies it's over for everything.
.....fox5 fails to get it, too. Different market entirely.
AMD has 2p and 4p server cpu/mobos as well, those are actually used a lot in the server market nowadays.
what does your son use it for?My son has an E5520 that I gave him. My brother has an X3350 that I gave him, and I have 2 AMD server CPU's, and my next 2 will be Xeon's.
Possibly for something thats non-trivial. Nobody cares about small glitches on game servers.what does your son use it for?
Think of all the extra on board communications as the server's internal internet connection...I have run a game server before and the most important thing the quality of the internet connection.
So what essentially is the difference between a mainstream i5/i7 and a similarly priced Xeon in terms of server and normal home usage?
So what essentially is the difference between a mainstream i5/i7 and a similarly priced Xeon in terms of server and normal home usage?
So what essentially is the difference between a mainstream i5/i7 and a similarly priced Xeon in terms of server and normal home usage?
what does your son use it for?
Not where Google brought me.Nothing wrong with your post, but did you seriously have to necro a 3.5 year old thread?
There are far more current threads posted about exactly what you're saying.