Stormyblade, on 12 July 2012 - 04:42 AM, said:
I swear, Vul must be getting kickbacks from AMD - he's always bashing Intel for their supposedly horrible business ethics, their utterly poor performance in CPUs, and the saying how great AMD CPUs are because they are just
made for gaming and run ridiculously fast on
all of their cores...well, when you overclock them, that is.
Several years ago, and I do mean
several, I would have agreed with him -- AMD definitely held the "crown" when it came to gaming rigs...and then the Quad Cores hit the streets. Since then, Intel has beaten out AMD in just about every single benchmark test, across the board, and is
2-3 generations ahead when it comes to technology leads, and has just left AMD struggling to match when it comes to CPU capability. And no, I'm not just pulling out opinion from my arse, I'm reading technical site reviews, PC magazine reviews, and talking with people who build computers. Every single person I know that tinkers with computers as a hobby, and has built several systems over the years has
always gone with an Intel CPU because it just performs, and does so in an amazing fashion.
All I would say for those that are looking for a new gaming rig...don't take the word of a couple people here...get on the internet, look some stuff up, read reviews, talk to friends that have computers, or better yet, build computers and see what they use.
First off, I give people the best advice I can, because I'm here to help others, for no other purpose do I spend as many hours as I do on this forum.
Second, AMD still holds the statistic price / performance advantage. Do they match up to the upper end Intel quad cores? No, but they don't have to for thier price. Any gamer, once they have a decent CPU, (an i3 or FX 4170/6200/ Phenom II X4) who is in their right mind, will then put the largest amount of their budget into their graphics card in order to make their computer perform as best it can in a game, rather than limiting their system due to having a strong CPU, but no real graphics power behind it.
Third, given that there is a longer upgrade cycle on motherboards with AMD, in all likelyhood there will be more viable CPU upgrades on a CPU socket. Also with this, with the AMD CPUs being less expensive and being able to overclock, they can match many of the lower end i5s in CPU performance after overclocking. But if you want top-of-the-line performance, and you have the budget for it, Intel is the better choice.
As someone who has built computers since he was 6, and done so on a regular basis for two years, has a number of friends who build PCs, and reads reviews daily, I have also done this; I don't blindly follow the opinions of others. I read the reviews, take into account the data, and the pricing of the CPUs, think of where things should be in two years, and I make decisions on what to recommend from all of this. My recommendations are based upon my own opinions after reading data from others.
But that is in itself what I recommend, do your own research, and decide for yourself what the better way to go is - don't blindly follow another's opinion.
As far as the ethics side, Intel has committed a large number of crimes in the past, and found guilty independently by multiple governments. AMD hasn't. Not quite sure how my pointing that out and referencing sources is a problem, other than informing consumers of somthing which may or may not matter to them, and depends on the individual's opinions.