iam2thecrowe :
turn out like sandy bridge? in what way? SB are way faster CPU's, they just have slower built in GPU's. IMO apu's are pointless at the moment. Its better to get a faster phenom IIx4, dedicated video card and motherboard. APU's offer nothing more than onboard graphics, they just moved the chip from the motherboard, to the CPU. IMO its a waste of money buying a CPU with integrated GPU when you will most likely have a dedicated GPU if you are into playing games.
There are some really interesting things going on with the A series architecture that will allow people with low budgets to beef up their graphics later with the crossfire feature.
"Similar to AMD’s CrossFire technology, this enables the on-board GPU to team up with a discrete AMD GPU to provide extra graphical horsepower. "
But then the A series are great on laptop's... I am really happy with my A6-3400M powered NV55S07u Gateway. I also found this to be a various interesting video with a Sandy bridge vs a AMD A series laptop's sitting side by side @
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqBk0uHrxII&feature=related I am also very pleased with the scaling that works great for power management.
And I only paid $449 USD for it which is a far cry from my $399 Compaq C551NR. This things runs for four hours easily in a single charge, and not sure how long offline as my eReader, but I am still playing with it.
Personally I have ran Intel's and AMD's since late 1994, also ATI and Nvidia's graphics cards. Plus a few other odds and ends.
We as users benefit when new tech comes out regardless of who made it. Personally CPU(s)/GPU(s) on a single die are the single best solution for new system builders by providing them a matched combo. Just as a person can get a lower end starter, they can always drop in a better unit later if they need to. But most forget that everyone had started somewhere.
Just as I started with my experince with Win 95 UG. It was on floppies, which was not fun since my Win 3.1 was already on floppy also. Not much later I sold that set for 50% off, and bought it on cd, and moved the files that the UG was looking for onto a single floppy. So when I had to do a reinstall, it was simplified. On the next Win release I used the same method without having to install a previous version of MS Windows... But I can finish this story another time.
Just as I started with my linux experience back in 1998 with Slackware when it was really RTFM to install it. Today I write you from my Kubuntu 11.04. I am still trying out various current distro's that have current or fairly recent kernel's.
I dual-boot... Win 7 for my games and a few other things. Kubuntu I do everything else since it has many open source tools that I do not want to have to try to buy in Win 7.