[citation][nom]ninjarubberduck[/nom]PC Perspective reported this same thing but updated it saying that AMD denied any additional near future price cuts.[/citation]
The source of the article is indicated as PC Perspective. Also, I and probably tons of people hope you're kidding.
[citation][nom]Schnitter[/nom]Thanks AMD for making it easier to boycott nVidia. So long as PhysX is still around forcing physics calculations on video cards while my CPU stays at 50% usage or less, I will not buy any nVidia product, or any game that supports PhysX (Borderlands 2 for example, no matter how good it is, won't buy it)[/citation]
I'm not sure what you meant as to why you wouldn't buy PhysX-related stuff. Mind explaining?
I'm just guessing that you meant that PhysX doesn't seem to help your CPU. If that's the case, I think it's because (maybe just in some cases) PhysX allows games to add more physics effects that run on your GPU rather than offload calculations from your CPU to your GPU.
[citation][nom]blazorthon[/nom]Have you actually looked into those CPUs? Take an FX-4100, bring the CPU/NB frequency to 3GHz from the 2GHz or 2.2GHz stock, use PSCheck to lower the P state frequencies of the second core of each module, and and heighten them for the first core of each module will let it beat the i3s significantly even without overclocking the CPU frequency. You can do the same with the other FX CPUs and you get some huge improvements. The FX-8120, with this, can give even the LGA 1155 K edition i5s and i7s some excellent competition in OC versus OC performance and at a much lower price.[/citation]
Hey blaz.

I've noticed you've been posting around about that PSCheck method along with the L3 cache one. The latter is understandable, but can you elaborate why tweaking the P-states of the 2 cores of a module in way that you're somewhat "transferring" some of the clocks from the 2nd to the 1st core. Would that really help with the scheduling/shared module resources problem or does it address another issue? I'm imagining that since the Windows hotfix activates the 1st core of every module first before the 2nd, this would just provide better overclocked performance for the 1st cores which are probably being used more.
Thanks.
