. . . Plus Intels just make me feel weird when I use them. If I had $1000 to blow on a PC, or even $500-800 I might do a C2D. But since I have $200-$300 I need to spend the money where it will do the most good. On an AMD. The nForce platform is mature on the AM2's, since the DDR2 support is in the Core of the CPU I don't have to pay for it and I get the nForce technology for a good price.
No wonder you've only made 7 posts in a year. You can't think of anything decent to say. :x
😛 All levity aside, they are two different processors that respond differently, I happen to prefer the AMD "feel". The core architecture of the AMD's I really like.
As far as the C2D goes, with the AMD price cuts there just isn't a reason to spend twice the money for a 20-30% increase in speed. Unless of course you have the money
😉.
As I mentioned before, I am dead set on nForce chipsets, I own 3 right now and I have owned 5 so far, I think they are great. The Intel nForce boards are too expensive in comparison, the AM2 and 939 sockets are much more mature technology that can be had for $50 and up, and these are stable Name-Brand boards that overclock great and last.
So I am not saying that the C2D's aren't great, but at the prices for a total system platform under $600 AMD has the edge because of price cuts, on nForce boards, which is what I run.
Not to mention that it will be simpler to go Quad-Core if I already own an AM2 nForce board, and that ain't not half bad.
Ughh, I have only made 7 posts because this forum is full of crap, little knowledge, and lots of posing and letting the gamer mags lead them around by the checkbook with every fad instead of focusing on solid systems. Remember when the RAID-0 for gaming myth got debunked?
Maybe not, it goes something like this: The game files are highly compressed, therefore more dependant on CPU than HDD max transfer rates, in fact RAID drivers may use that vital CPU power and cause slower load times.
Yet there are still people out there who swear by RAID for a gaming system, I guess for quad-core it makes sense, if the game supports quad-core decompressing.
Upshot? I do miss the old Tomshardware, but at least I have a place that sometimes reviews things I want to see, and sometimes they do it properly, and if not I have an oppurtunity to give my thoughts on the matter and get ridiculed, ah such is life.