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---- re-reading this post later on----
This post doesnt make much sense.. Im high on cafeine.. I dont see my own point.. but since I typed it, I'll post it.
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Man this is a long thread.. one of the more civilized AMD vs Intel though.. However, sometimes I fail to grasp the point (as in most amd vs intel threads).. Its like reading a newsgroup of football fans.. only most of you guys are much more devoted to your favourite silicon provider than most die hard football fans I know ;-)
Anyway, I am completely indifferent to SpecInt and SpecFP scores.. as I am mostly indifferent to just about any synthetic benchmark. I dont run benchmarks all day, I run applications ! Imagine VIA would come up with a Cyrix XII cpu that smokes the compitition in SPEC benchmarks, but lags in real world apps.. Are we gonna buy a Cyrix XII then ?
Right now, Athlon and P4 are *very* close in most, if not all real world applications. Some apps prefer one cpu, some the other. Use this knowledge to choose the cpu that does your work fastest for a reasonable price. If you need that much CPU power at all, that is.. frankly, most of us dont.
However, to me there are some other points to take into consideration when deciding on a cpu platform apart from speed and cost. Like upgrade paths. If you buy a bright and shiny P4 right now, there is little or no way to upgrade your system without throwing away your motherboard later on.
That is one reason I would not concider a P4 until Northwood comes out. Some people (or especially companies) dont take this as a problem, as they will be upgrading entire PC's only.. I like tossing around components every soo often to always get a good price/performance ratio. To me, currently, this ideal price/performance ratio is a Duron 7-8-900. I dont need anything faster currently (but then thats me, I play games, I dont render 3D max all day).
The nice thing about the AMD platform, is that I can double my performance using the same components (mb, ram, video) by just swapping the cpu for a 1.5+ palomino when it comes out. Quite likely, I"ll be able to stick with this setup upto a 2 Ghz T-bird. No that is some nice upgrade path. Almost as good as getting my P200 to a K6 500 🙂
intel can not give me this today. They could in the past (BX going from 350 to more or less 1 ghz). Now, P3 platforms hit the ceiling at 1 Ghz. Buying a P3-8xx is therefore not an option to me.. (even regardless of the cost compared to an Athlon)
The P4 has a relative small range from 1.3 (still quite expensive with 800 Mhz RDRAM) to 1.5, maybe 1.7 in the near future.
When Northwood comes out, and they sell some "low-end" Northwood cpu for a reasonable price, I might reconcider and actually start advising my friends to go for a "cheap" northwood solution, and upgrade later as needed.
All other arguments pro and contra intel / amd are a question of preferences. How important is thermal protection to you ? How often are you gonna remove the heatsink yourself, and how carefull are you ? Are you an overclocker or not ? Is SMP something your apps will benefite from ?
We all have different opinions about those, and base our purchasing on them. Thats my bottom line. Over the past I've bought both AMD and Intel systems.. from a 286 8 Mhz to a Duron @933. I have yet to regret one purchase.. (hmm.. okay.. maybe I was disapointed when I went from a 5x86-133 (486 style chip) to an Pentium 133...difference was minimal, cost relatively high).
Since Im already boring the crap out of you.. let me list my cpu history:
286 8 Mhz (intel)
486 33 Mhz (intel)
486 66 Mhz (amd)
5x86 133 (amd)
Pentium 133 (intel)
P2-266 (intel)
K6-500 (amd) (second PC)
P3-500 (intel)
Duron 600@933 (amd)
Celeron 500 laptop (intel)
Now, am I a AMD advocate or not ? You tell me.
This post doesnt make much sense.. Im high on cafeine.. I dont see my own point.. but since I typed it, I'll post it.
-----------------------------
Man this is a long thread.. one of the more civilized AMD vs Intel though.. However, sometimes I fail to grasp the point (as in most amd vs intel threads).. Its like reading a newsgroup of football fans.. only most of you guys are much more devoted to your favourite silicon provider than most die hard football fans I know ;-)
Anyway, I am completely indifferent to SpecInt and SpecFP scores.. as I am mostly indifferent to just about any synthetic benchmark. I dont run benchmarks all day, I run applications ! Imagine VIA would come up with a Cyrix XII cpu that smokes the compitition in SPEC benchmarks, but lags in real world apps.. Are we gonna buy a Cyrix XII then ?
Right now, Athlon and P4 are *very* close in most, if not all real world applications. Some apps prefer one cpu, some the other. Use this knowledge to choose the cpu that does your work fastest for a reasonable price. If you need that much CPU power at all, that is.. frankly, most of us dont.
However, to me there are some other points to take into consideration when deciding on a cpu platform apart from speed and cost. Like upgrade paths. If you buy a bright and shiny P4 right now, there is little or no way to upgrade your system without throwing away your motherboard later on.
That is one reason I would not concider a P4 until Northwood comes out. Some people (or especially companies) dont take this as a problem, as they will be upgrading entire PC's only.. I like tossing around components every soo often to always get a good price/performance ratio. To me, currently, this ideal price/performance ratio is a Duron 7-8-900. I dont need anything faster currently (but then thats me, I play games, I dont render 3D max all day).
The nice thing about the AMD platform, is that I can double my performance using the same components (mb, ram, video) by just swapping the cpu for a 1.5+ palomino when it comes out. Quite likely, I"ll be able to stick with this setup upto a 2 Ghz T-bird. No that is some nice upgrade path. Almost as good as getting my P200 to a K6 500 🙂
intel can not give me this today. They could in the past (BX going from 350 to more or less 1 ghz). Now, P3 platforms hit the ceiling at 1 Ghz. Buying a P3-8xx is therefore not an option to me.. (even regardless of the cost compared to an Athlon)
The P4 has a relative small range from 1.3 (still quite expensive with 800 Mhz RDRAM) to 1.5, maybe 1.7 in the near future.
When Northwood comes out, and they sell some "low-end" Northwood cpu for a reasonable price, I might reconcider and actually start advising my friends to go for a "cheap" northwood solution, and upgrade later as needed.
All other arguments pro and contra intel / amd are a question of preferences. How important is thermal protection to you ? How often are you gonna remove the heatsink yourself, and how carefull are you ? Are you an overclocker or not ? Is SMP something your apps will benefite from ?
We all have different opinions about those, and base our purchasing on them. Thats my bottom line. Over the past I've bought both AMD and Intel systems.. from a 286 8 Mhz to a Duron @933. I have yet to regret one purchase.. (hmm.. okay.. maybe I was disapointed when I went from a 5x86-133 (486 style chip) to an Pentium 133...difference was minimal, cost relatively high).
Since Im already boring the crap out of you.. let me list my cpu history:
286 8 Mhz (intel)
486 33 Mhz (intel)
486 66 Mhz (amd)
5x86 133 (amd)
Pentium 133 (intel)
P2-266 (intel)
K6-500 (amd) (second PC)
P3-500 (intel)
Duron 600@933 (amd)
Celeron 500 laptop (intel)
Now, am I a AMD advocate or not ? You tell me.