Intel Targets AMD With Affordable Unlocked CPUs
EconolineCrush writes "For years, AMD has catered to gamers and enthusiasts with mid-range Black Edition processors whose unlocked multipliers make overclocking easy. Intel has traditionally reserved unlocked multipliers for its ultra-expensive Extreme CPUs, but it has now brought the feature to affordable models that compete directly with AMD's most popular processors. The Core i5-655K and Core i7-875K have two and four cores, respectively, and they're priced at just $216 and $342. It appears that both will easily hit speeds in excess of 4GHz with air cooling. Surprisingly, even at stock speeds, the i7-875K offers better performance and power efficiency per dollar than just about any other desktop CPU out there."
Really, you call yourself a news for nerds site.
whi has the world one icrazy? For goodness sake there are 26 other letters to choose from.
It seems to me that for too long naming conventions follow the turbo marketing rule and bear little significance to the product. icore... please.
But i suppose this is good news for people that brought a CPU that doesn't allow you to tweak the multipler. I understand that this makes it much easier to clock and keep a reliable system. But for most people this is not an issue. Maybe it shows Intel are realising how much they are loosing to the gamer / media center PC builder, that works on a budget (would have selected the AMD over the Intel for price vs speed).
I just use a dual core Intel that's not clocked, and it's fine for what I need. If anything it's the RAM that I need to upgrade (to 8Gb).
I thought we learned that, like sex and the Pentium 4, faster isn't always necessarily better...
Living With a Nerd
"just $216 and $342"?
The majority of regular users can get by with just about any modern processor on the market today. Just glancing at Newegg, single core CPU's are starting at $32. Dual cores at $50. Quad cores at $81. I personally haven't spent more than $100 on a processor in ages, and I'm more or less a power user (do heavy programming and video encoding as well as other such tasks on my systems).
Now, at work, for servers, and I'm sure other users who are doing things like heavy graphics editing and such, people do need faster processors, but the people doing such tasks are NOT going to give two shits whether or not the multiplier is unlocked (anybody using an overclocked processor in a professional environment is just asking for trouble).
So you're left with the absolute hardcore hardware enthusiast market. Even in this market though you're going to have the "I'm poor and don't want to spend much" people who are still going for the low cost ones and trying to push them, and the "I've got money to blow and want the fastest available" people who were likely buying the really, really expensive stuff already.
In short, I just don't see this feature, at the stated price points, as really having much of a market.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
Intel have nothing to lose anymore by keeping the multipliers locked: the bottleneck isn't with the CPU frequency anymore. The biggest differentiators in their higher end models are number of cores and cache size.
If they can get few more sales with a pointless gimmick some fall for, why not?
It appears that both will easily hit speeds in excess of 4GHz with air cooling.
Nigel Tufnel: These go to eleven.
"Enthusiasts" are people with more money than sense. Why would anyone pay more than $150 for a CPU these days? A quad-core 3.0Ghz chip is not going to be your bottleneck. Yeah, I guess if you spend all day ripping and encoding video then that extra 10%-20% might amount to a few minutes saved, but for most people spending the extra $150 on an SSD drive instead would give them a far more noticeable performance boost.
Or, if you've still got money to burn, buy a nicer monitor-- or a second one, for that matter. Or some quality case fans that don't make your case sound like a jet engine. Or a decent set of speakers.
The obsession with CPU "speed" is dumb.
Well, I guess when anti-competitive practices fail.....
There is a war going on for your mind.
At the $200 price point, AMD is still killing it. Look at the scatter plot, and note what happens on the $200 line. Now, draw an imaginary $100 line, and check that out. It's all AMD. So while you may want to buy intel if you want today's fastest gaming machine, AMD is still the processor for those of us who want performance and money at the same time.
With that said, can anyone recommend a good AM3 air cooler that's not too spendy? I have a PhII X3 720 retail black edition that I'd like to overclock. The stock cooler won't cut it :) But I want to keep my budget very small, which is why I went AMD in the first place. So far, so good.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
The cards! they bounce TOO FAST!!
http://clusty.com/search?query=intel+monopoly
http://clusty.com/search?query=intel+apartheid
Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
The article comparing values uses the highest price motherboard available for AMD for a "midrange" system, then claims that the Intel-based total system is a value. If you spend $350 on a 6-core processor, then spending $140 on a high-end motherboard is reasonable. If you're spending $99 for a low end AMD quad, you're probably in the market for more reasonably priced motherboard (~$100) to go with it. The comparison is valid for the high-end AMD cpus, but not their budget stuff, as a $40 drop in price is a big deal for a system with a $100 cpu.
That being said, being able to overclock this thing is directly aimed at the enthusiast market. "I got 6 cores, w00t!" "Yeah, well I'm at 4GHZ on a quad, so there!" It definitely improves the competition between the high end AMD hexa-cores and the midrange Intel quads, and makes the Intel option more appealing to the enthusisast.
The Internet has no garbage collection
NO 1336? so you are stuck with 16 pci-e lanes so a good video card can uses that up and then when you add usb 3.0 and sata 6.0 you cut into the video pci-e lanes.
for $200 you can get a AMD board with 890fx that has more pci-e lanes so you can have 2 x16 video cards + room for sata 6.0 and usb 3.0 as well.
Anyone who can build comparable systems for significantly less than those bozos, raise your hand.
Shift the second scatter graph to the left from anywhere between $200 to $400, and then draw a new conclusion.
"His name was James Damore."
good amd MB are $150-200 good intel ones $200-250 and the amd boards have more pci-e lanes as well.
Intel Targets AMD...
Nice to see this. In the past 10 years it has always been 'AMD targets Intel.' AMD must be doing something right if Intel is taking notice of it and that means a little competition which is great for the future of the hardware.
Can someone please explain overclocking to me? Why are processors sold at a slower speed than they can actually perform at? Why don't they ship from the factory at their fastest speed?
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
No, here at Intel, we only support 1337.
Obligatory XKCD
http://xkcd.com/670/
"Surprisingly, even at stock speeds, the i7-875K offers better performance and power efficiency per dollar than just about any other desktop CPU out there."
-1, Inaccurate
The 2.8ghz i7-930 is $199 vs $342 for a 2.93ghz i7-875K, so almost double the price for 0.13ghz more. How did the author see that and think "better performance per dollar"? The article he linked to even shows the better performance per dollar in a chart, and btw techreport that chart is pretty piss poor, shoving $200 processors on a chart that goes to $1200 just clumps 90% of the processors in the $50 to $400 range. Learn how to make a chart: you should have left off under $50 (no processors under $50) and anything past $1000 (no processors over $1000). Because of your crappy chart the i7-875 is right next to the i7-930 despite the $142 difference.
The i7-930 is locked but it does reach 4ghz on air rather easily.
I suppose all of this is a mute because the LGA 1156 platform and LGA 1366 platform are being discontinued next year, so if you don't already have a i7 compatible motherboard you'd be buying a board that won't be compatible with any cpus made 7 months from now. I wouldn't buy a i7 cpu unless intel started selling them for $50, while AM3 boards available now are compatible with future 16-core cpus
my karma will be here long after I'm gone
No, here at Intel, we only support 1337.
But over here at the 1336 0f 1337 63n700m3n, either one is fine.
Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
faster is better as long as the duration remains the same or longer.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Intel is not affordable compared to AMD.
My system here has been frizzing out on me after 4+ years, and literally 2 hours ago I ordered an AMD 3ghz 3-core processor for 75 bucks. the board (with on board GPU) , 2gb memory, and cpu with shipping came to $230...
JUST 14 bucks more than the only Intel's dual-core processor listed in the article.
Troll, Troll, go away and flame again some other day
Based on what? There are plenty of good LGA 1156 mobos available in $100-150 range. I'd guess you have no idea of what you are talking about on the PCI-E lanes.
U+F8FF
I call bullshit. USB 3.0 doesn't use PCI-E lanes.
U+F8FF
To show how much full of shit you are, see this for example: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131641
Triple SLI at X16/X8/X8, or dual SLI at full X16/X16. Seems to be somewhat more than your alleged 16 lanes.
U+F8FF
To bad the cpus hear are 1156 that come with low pci-e lanes.
Too bad you don't know how much or little the PCI-E lanes have to do with the CPU.
U+F8FF
so the usb chip uses magic to talk the main chipset?
I haven't forgotten the pentium 90 math bug fiasco.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentium_FDIV_bug
I have used AMD exclusively since then, and will continue to do so.
Uh, Linux geek since 1999.
And here's a tri-SLI LGA 1156 board for you: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130258
U+F8FF
Do you have any idea of what you are talking about here? If your theory of USB 3.0 eating up PCI-E lanes was correct, how would that not apply to AMD boards too?
U+F8FF
I went through the numbers myself... they don't seem to add up very well as TFA would lead you to believe...
let's first blab about something totally unrelated---
Someone buys a Yugo and does a lot of modifications to it, another buys a stock low-mid range performance car-so something like this:
"How much money have you spent total on your car?"
Yugo boy: I spent $5,000 to buy my car, and $16,000 in modifications
Stock boy: I spent $21,000 to buy my car.
"What kind of gas mileage do you get? (in MPG)"
Yugo boy: I used to get 34MPG before I modified it, now I get 18, and I can only use high octane
Stock boy: I get 18MPG on regular 87 octane
"Compare your cars speed on a generic track with straight aways and turns, be courteous if you can"
Yugo boy: Stock boy's car is faster than mine in turns, but my car out-accelerates him in straightaways.
Stock boy: Yugo's car is faster than mine in straightaways when it's not broken down at the side of the road or if his engine doesn't hiccup, I have the edge in braking and turning.
"How do your cars do for everyday driving?"
Yugo boy: I've removed the power steering for wright and power, the ride is loud, bouncy, and stiff, but that just means I can feel and hear the road better, and if I am at a drive-through or a stop light for an excessive amount of time it might overheat.
Stock boy: I have a comfortable quiet ride with no issues, and my car is easy to drive.
"What do you do when things go wrong?"
Yugo boy: I have to fix it myself, buying any parts that broke.
Stock boy: My car is fully under warranty, and I can have almost any part that broke replaced for free, as long as it wasn't directly my fault.
"What options do you have to make your cars faster?"
Yugo boy: I am maxed out, all I could do is lessen the weight more and buy a different engine, both are extremely expensive to do
Stock boy: There are an array of bolt-ons, computer re-programmers, and other easy modifications I can do to this car to make it faster, quite a few of them don't even void the warranty.
so relating this to computer parts...
setting up 2 rigs almost the same (full atx name brand mobo with at least 2 pcie slots, radeon 5770 graphics, corsair 650watt psu, cooler master case, blu-ray reader, a dvd burner, a 1tb 7200rpm hdd), one with a core i7 920 and 3gb ddr3 1600 ram in tri channel ($1052 with a stock heatsink) and the other with a "new" core i7 875K and 4gb of ddr3 1600 in dual channel ($1062 with an aftermarket heatsink), the "modified yugo" ends up being more expensive than the stock mid range car... For me it's a no brainer, and this isn't even factoring AMD into the equation...
When we look at AMD it ends up being $670 for all the support products (same specs used, full atx brand name mobo with at least 2 pcie slots, radeon 5770 graphics, corsair 650watt psu, cooler master case, blu-ray reader, a dvd burner, a 1tb 7200rpm hdd), 4gb ddr3 1600 in dual channel, which leaves you quite a bit of money to spend on the CPU and heatsink you want, and there are a nice amount of options from $50-$310 depending on the amount of tinkering you want to do to get the performance you are looking for. (which correlates to a price range of $720-$980 without the heatsink.
So depending on the level of AMD tinkering you would want to do you could have $72-$82 differential for the high end AMD chip to spend on cooling/whatnot or if you look at the low end you could have up to $332-$342 differential between those intel options to spend on cooling/whatnot... (so you could do a nice heatsink fan/low level water setup with the high end cpu, or an all-out phase change setup with one of the bargain bin AMD chips)
So my opinion before this was announced and after it was is still the same... if you go intel, socket 1366 is the way to go, if you want a cheap capable rig, AMD has a lot to offer.
Some drastic price cutting could change my opinions though!
Now I understand what is going on.
Basically, the chips are sold to reliably run at what they are set to run at, but they might run faster, especially if you put in robust cooling.
Interesting.
I just bought a new system with a i7-930. Supposedly it can be overclocked. I have not fooled with it. The system does have liquid cooling though.
Steve
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
*sigh* I thought this was a tech site. What does one have to do to counter this kind of junk?
Here's (an allegedly non-existent) LGA 1156 board with 3 x PCI-E X16 slots: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130238
There's plenty of room for those USB 3.0 and SATA-600 cards with the extra 4 expansion slots, even if the parent seems to suggest that just having them integrated would eat up the PCI-E lanes.
U+F8FF
amd boards have more pci-e lanes then the intel ones. But ones the listed intel cpus have only have 16 + DMI and DMI is full with Intel on board sata 3.0 / usb 2.0 / other on board stuff and the add on sata 6.0 / usb 3.0 have to use the 16 for video.
uses a switch the shears the 16 pci-e lanes
Actually the turbo button was for decreasing performance so your "old" applications could run as they intended....
Just marketing got a hold of it and just like the old fridge sized IBM tape drives back in the day that were going to be designed with a "Idle" light instead were granted with a "Ready" light (remember IBM's were never..IDLE!), the "make the machine go slower button so your old stuff runs" became "Push this button and when the light comes on you're running the computer faster than if it wasn't on!"
If you are comparing Intel is a salty biker, Microsoft must be a Mafioso.
I would have compared Intel to a street lawyer.
Best regards.
Any references? I didn't think so. Do you even know what DMI is? Would DMI be relevant, how would you think it would be relevant to PCI-E lanes?
U+F8FF
Just because there's a x16 slot doesn't mean all the lanes get hooked up. I looked at the manual for the motherboard you listed. This is the relevant section:
3 PCI Express 2.0 x16 slots
* if you intend to install two expanson cards into both PCI_E2 & PCI_E4 slots, these two PCIE x16 lanes wll auto arrange from x16/ x0 to x8/ x8
* the PCI_E5 supports up to PCIE 2.0 x4 speed
* all PCIE x1 slots will unavalable when an expanson card was installed into PCI_E5 slot.
2 PCI Express 2.0 x1 slots
* all PCIE x1 slots will unavalable when an expanson card was installed into PCI_E5 slot.
The only thing that is not clear is that if the PCI_E5 slot (the lower one) is disabled when the upper two (E2, E4) have two x16 cards in them. Taking the most optimistic view of the manual specifications, at maximum, there are only 16 + 4 lanes available. As to if eSATA and USB 3 eat up the lanes... that's another story.
- i7 940 owner
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
The Core i5-655K and Core i7-875K have two and four cores, respectively, and they're priced at just $216 and $342. It appears that both will easily hit speeds in excess of 4GHz with air cooling.
I can buy a regular i5-750 quad core that will air OC to 3.6-3.8Ghz for about 215$ CND. So I can get a slightly faster dual core for the same price? yhippie.
So what is so special about these chips and why would I buy them? Anyway they don't seem all that special a deal. Unlocked multiplyer is neat, but the pricing VS performance I don't think makes any sense.
Same goes for the folks that buy a 200$ CPU and a 100$ cooler, then they could have just bought a 300$ CPU to begin with. Particulary when they mess with socket specs all the time making your previous cooling setup worthless.
Anyway if your doing it for fun whatever, it is. Just it doesn't make sense all the time. Getting as much out of your CPU just makes sense, but buying assuming OC is a bad idea, even with an unlocked multiplyer, there is nothing to say it will hit the 4+Ghz mark, and if you don't nothing you can do about it.
AMD never had the TLB bug...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_Phenom
I have used Intel exclusively since I could build my own machineat 13 years old, and will continue to do so.
I mean 2.0 x16 PCIe slot.
Interesting post.
Few questions unanswered by it:
What size (MB and #lines of host files) of a dataset did you actually have?
Why did you use Delphi 7, exactly? Its just an odd choice (from 2001), not universally proclaimed as the fastest in the world. Is it because its the fastest that you are familiar with? Its also obviously not 64 bit.
Why are you doing server work on a desktop? Typically that kind of a workload is performed on servers. It doesn't really require a gui, just brunt horsepower. It isn't something that most desktop users would be doing, not even power users like graphic designers or cad users. There is no argument that you could benefit from faster processors in a server. However, that is not what we are talking about here.
Why are you comparing the x2 4800 from 2005 to a top of the line processor from today? That's not a $100 processor of today, its a discontinued not even available in most web stores, processor. $100 gets you a amd phenom II 3.2 ghz processor today. See how much of a difference there is between that and your i7.
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
I splurged 12 years ago on a $2500 pc and used it until I upgraded five years ago to a then two year old desktop. The new machine was being scrapped out because the heatsink mounts broke and it would overheat. Easy repair. Used this machine until a month ago. The replacement is a free Xeon Quad-core with a failed HDD - easily repaired and has provided great uptime.
Of course, I squeeze a lot more useful work out of these machines because they run Linux, without cycle-sapping anti-virus programs.
o
AMD must really be worrying them.
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
You said it man. It simply isn't 1337 enough.
the i7-875K offers better performance and power efficiency per dollar than just about any other desktop CPU out there."
Yep, coming in near the top at .... place 17. http://techreport.com/articles.x/18988/2
The author must be an Intel fan. Almost all the best price/performance numbers are in AMD's offerings.
What? The cheapest LGA1156 CPU listed on Newegg, the Pentium G6950 for $98, supports VT. http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=43230 So does the cheapest i3 they offer, the $115 530. http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=46472
The older LGA775 chips did use VT as a selling point, but I believe that most current Intel CPUs support it. Since VT was required for Win7's VirtualPC XP Mode, it became a more standard option recently.
Seriously is kdawson getting kickbacks for posting this crap. Since the "ignore kdawson" filter has been broken I find the need to keep score on bullshit he keeps posting and he's in the red for my bullshit-o-dometer.
It's like some smarmy marketing prick sends a submission to kdawson and says "there's 200 bucks in it for ya if you post it."
I mean seriously Taco, you need to look into this shit...
-=[ Who Is John Galt? ]=-