Everyone knows that the Core 2 Duo has been dominating for awhile, and it's become almost habitual to assume it's the best solution... but lately it seems to me that people have been recommending it to the exclusion of everything else in almost every situation.
Funny thing is, when you look at the benchmarks for low to mid-range systems, things aren't really that clear-cut. AMD and Intel tend to trade blows in the same price range, especially when you factor in the reduced price of decent AM2 motherboards as compared to the latest (too expensive) 775 chipsets.
Granted, the C2D pretty much smacks most AM2 processors around when it comes to overclocking, but again, people are ignoring actual tests that have been going around lately. The Brisbane line (especially the X2 3600+) have shown some pretty great OCing results, including fairly easy 3GHz+ overclocks on a 1.9GHz processor which comes in at half the price of an E4300.
Even around the $200 range, AMD isn't getting crushed as handily as most people seem to think. Processors like the 4600+, 4800+, and 5000+ are solid offerings and trump the comparably priced E6300/E6400 in a fair amount of benchmarks.
Yes, the high-end and overclocking crowns belong to Intel right now, but does this warrant the kind of exclusivity enthusiasts have been giving them lately?
Funny thing is, when you look at the benchmarks for low to mid-range systems, things aren't really that clear-cut. AMD and Intel tend to trade blows in the same price range, especially when you factor in the reduced price of decent AM2 motherboards as compared to the latest (too expensive) 775 chipsets.
Granted, the C2D pretty much smacks most AM2 processors around when it comes to overclocking, but again, people are ignoring actual tests that have been going around lately. The Brisbane line (especially the X2 3600+) have shown some pretty great OCing results, including fairly easy 3GHz+ overclocks on a 1.9GHz processor which comes in at half the price of an E4300.
Even around the $200 range, AMD isn't getting crushed as handily as most people seem to think. Processors like the 4600+, 4800+, and 5000+ are solid offerings and trump the comparably priced E6300/E6400 in a fair amount of benchmarks.
Yes, the high-end and overclocking crowns belong to Intel right now, but does this warrant the kind of exclusivity enthusiasts have been giving them lately?