blazorthon :
Intel Pentium G620 plus Radeon 6670. It gets about 50% higher frame rates than the A8s do (according to Tom's). There are viable Intel entry lever gaming solutions. The G620 plus 6670 is also usually slightly cheaper than the A8s and uses far less power, saving even more money over time. It's only sacrifice is in moderately/highly threaded performance, however, at this low of a gaming level, that does not effect gaming performance. It only reduces the G620's productivity performance.
Intel's Larrabee is extremely different from AMD's and Nvidia's technology. It would not be easy for them to move over to working for Intel. Intel didn't need them anyway when it made Larrabee and then Knight's Corner and it's family of products. It's not speculation that Intel can improve just like any other manufacturer. Intel has proven that they can with Knight's Corner and it's family of products, as well as with their CPU divisions and more.
Otherwise, yes, we seem to agree on the rest of this right now.
Intel's Larrabee is extremely different from AMD's and Nvidia's technology. It would not be easy for them to move over to working for Intel. Intel didn't need them anyway when it made Larrabee and then Knight's Corner and it's family of products. It's not speculation that Intel can improve just like any other manufacturer. Intel has proven that they can with Knight's Corner and it's family of products, as well as with their CPU divisions and more.
Otherwise, yes, we seem to agree on the rest of this right now.
So, first, I want to apologize for any nerd-snark I've committed, the Internet makes a$$%#$s of us all.
However, I still feel that Intel is champ mainly because of memory performance and as evidence for this, I'm posting a link for you. I know this is a synthetic benchmark, and therefore insufficient for telling the full performance picture, but synthetic tests do allow us to isolate the performance of a CPU under very specific operations and give us a view of various subsystems' performance that we can't easily extract from the framerate of X game. When you look at the various synthetic tests, the memory tests are pretty much the only subsystem tests where Intel is always on top, although the highest-end Intel parts win many other subsystem tests. Plus, these test are backed up when you also look at the number of clocks for cache access and we know Intel uses fewer cycles at every level of cache than AMD, although I think this is somewhat mitigated by AMD's higher average clock rate (Sorry I don't have a link on that, but google is your friend).
http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/desktop-cpu-charts-2010/Memory-Bandwitdh-SiSoftware-Sandra-2010-Pro-Mem,2413.html
These results are consistent between Tom's and other sites' various synthetic benchmarks. The first thing you might note is that none of the processors actually deliver as much bandwidth as they claim in their specifications and AMD delivers far less than it claims and far less than Intel on a consistent basis. To me, this kind of subsystem isolation testing would indicate that Intel's chip are faster largely thanks to memory throughput, and when you examine other applications, those that have the largest memory footprint, usually give Intel the biggest advantage over AMD, like the WinRAR, and 7zip tests. I don't know about the games tested, but I would be surprised if those that favor Intel don't have a much larger memory footprint, or at least much more memory operations, which is usually a function of the running applications memory footprint, but also memory access patterns and frequency. After all, the less memory an application accesses, the faster it performs, because it stalls the CPU to retrieve data from RAM and the caches less often.
Maybe I'm reading test results wrong, but as I read the tests here and elsewhere, Intel appears to dominate mainly through much better memory subsystems.