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"Budget" Chips go Head-to-Head

StewedSquirrel writes "Anandtech has published an article taking a look at the low-end of the CPU market today. It takes Intel's newest Celeron processors against the AthlonXP and Duron with a Pentium 4 1.8GHz thrown in for comparison. All of these processors will cost you under $120, but the article shows that the old Duron (at barely $40) can out-perform Intel chips costing nearly 3x as much. In addition, it shows that the performance of the Athlon XP is head and shoulders above the Celeron processors, while costing roughly the same."

7 of 372 comments (clear)

  1. A war on many fronts is a war of attrition by Space+cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to me that the number of market sectors may be the ultimate decider here, rather than the actual technology :-(

    Intel simply have larger resources - they can push money at blue-skies research, and non-profitable lines, whereas AMD (although successful) have to "bet the company" on every major decision...

    In a way, I think it's because AMD is such an underdog, that I like the company - although the fact that their chips are damn good helps a lot :-)

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  2. Re:They missed the green one! by peterdaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On a serious note, people, including myself, are starting to worry about power consumption. I'd like to pick up a low power device for a BSD gateway.

    Agreed! I'm currently interesting in replacing my 400Mhz desktop. (I've got a 1ghz dell laptop, and 12"TiBook) It's used mostly when I either don't want to unpack my notebook, or want to take advantage of my 21" monitor.

    I have three major "wants":
    1. Be good on power...I don't want to power it down. (Does linux suspend well yet?)
    2. I want it to be quiet...I don't want to be able to hear it.
    3. Major brand. I can build and support my own machines, but don't want the hastle with this one.

    It is very hard to shop for something like this, as it's not something that is well marketed. I don't need it bad enough to be willing to spend major time comparing hard to find specs on a model at a time basis. I am sure swordbuy and myself are not the only ones with desires like this.

    AMD was high on my list, and it just jumped a little bit higher.

    -Pete

  3. What I like by The+Tyro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    is the term "low end of the cpu market," as if to imply these chips are somehow less than adequate...

    Bah.

    Both of my current linux desktop machines run these "low end" chips, and they run just fine, thanks very much. They all have a bunch of RAM... but other than that they are very vanilla... 1.3ghz Durons all. It makes you wonder what's really driving the CPU market (other than wow-look-at-this-shiny-new-CPU marketing).

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  4. Upgrades by vasqzr · · Score: 5, Insightful


    These Sub-$100 CPUs serve as decent upgrades for aging systems (e.g. the P3-800 that is barely chugging along)

    I'm using a P3-550MHz, and it's fine for everything I do all day.

    Can I have that 'useless' 800MHz chip when you toss it?

  5. Re:It's clear... by Glock27 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I agree. G5s all round then. :-)

    Cheers, Ian

    Touche. I'm actually a G5 fan myself, and will own one as soon as I can afford it.

    Let's face it though, a lot of people (especially Linux people!) are committed to x86. Opteron/Athlon64 looks like the most future-proof route there, by far.

    I've also seen some performance comparisons where AMD64 trounces the G5. Not that there aren't examples in the other direction, but clock-for-clock Opteron seems a bit faster. It'll be worth keeping an eye on things as compilers improve and applications are updated. We'll also see if new G5 speed grades up to 2.6 GHz. really appear this spring...if G5 can get ahead on the clockspeed front it could prevail in real-world performance.

    According to some of those benchmarks, though, it has a lot of ground to make up...

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  6. Re:Upgrades not always necesary... by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Took the damn thing back to their house and a whole bunch of the extended family was there, it being the holidays and all. They check out the computer and they are all, "Nice computer, only 2.6 GHZ though..."

    Heh :) This is the angle that Dell takes. They have those silly charts that shows 2.6GHz is only good for email and web browsing, while 3.0GHz is what you need for serious applications and gaming. In reality, it's only a 15% difference in raw clockspeed! And the actual performance increase is less than that, of course, because the bus and memory speeds are still the same. Okay, and the 3GHz machine uses significantly more power (more than a 15% increase), but Dell doesn't advertise that.

    There really isn't a high-end PC market any more. ALL PCs are high-end.

  7. Re:Video Card by Stregone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Its probably to move the bottleneck away from the video card.