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AMD Releases Three New Low-Cost CPUs

WesternActor writes "With its new Fusion APUs coming out in about a month, you wouldn't think AMD would still be tweaking its processor lineup. But it released three new processors today—the Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition, the Phenom II X2 565 Black Edition, and the Athlon II X3 455—to balance out its price-performance offerings. The Black Edition CPUs with their unlocked multipliers are probably the most interesting, particularly the Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition which has six cores, runs at 3.3 GHz, and costs only $265. As the name implies, the 1100T represents only a minute increase in clock speed over the 1090T. It even has the same amount of L2 and L3 cache (3MB and 6MB, respectively), is based on the same 45nm production process, and is designed for the currently standard AM3 socket. Given that 1090T got the downward nudge in price to $235, however, the 1100T offers slightly better performance for less money."

13 of 101 comments (clear)

  1. Low cost? by jewelises · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've heard of marketers redefining price points, but this is ridiculous. I've never paid more than $150 for a processor.

    1. Re:Low cost? by hedwards · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As the other poster suggested, you can buy an entire AMD based system for what one of Intel's high end processors costs. There are people who want that level of performance and are willing to pay, but the chip does cost a lot.

    2. Re:Low cost? by blair1q · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Intel has parts similar to these at about these prices. The Intel part that costs $1000 more makes one of these things run like an abacus.

    3. Re:Low cost? by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Informative

      Exactly. I built my current machine for around $600 after rebate and it has a 925 2.8GHz quad, 8GB of DDR2 800MHz, an HD460, a pair of 500GB HDDs, and Windows 7 HP X64. To build an Intel machine at the roughly same specs I was looking at a minimum of around $200 more thanks to the higher prices on Intel motherboards, and if I wanted anything even slightly future proof I would have had to go DDR3 which 8GB would have put a serious bite in my wallet.

      Plus if you support having a free market and competition your really should be looking at AMD first. Intel was caught bribing OEMs and rigging their compilers to sabotage AMD chips, which is why they paid AMD 1.25 Billion to try to make the heat go away. Personally I think Intel will still be looking at EU fines as well as a host of lawsuits by AGs. I'm all for someone winning a good chunk of the market by having better products, performance, marketing, etc, but sabotaging the market through payoff and rigging just makes the market a sham.

      So unless you are in one of the niches where the insane price difference is worth it to squeeze every amount of speed you can get I would look at AMD first. Since Intel got caught rigging and bribing and Nvidia pulled bumpgate I have switched my shop to AMD only and my customers couldn't be happier. I just sent out a triple core with 4GB of RAM and a TB of HDD along with an HD4350 for the local print shop and it cost them just $485 after paying me. According to the owner which had already added a quad I built to the office the performance is great and the lower price is allowing him to accelerate the replacement of the older machines in his business. Hell you can get quad kit with Win 7 for $400 or supply your own OS and get a get a triple for $220. Intel just doesn't have anything similar at those price points unless you get the bottom o' the line Celery or Pentium duals. At those prices the bang for the buck is firmly in the AMD camp. And if you are looking at mobile the Turion and Neo chips make for nice laptops you can actually play games and watch HD video on without breaking the bank. Not a hard choice IMHO.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    4. Re:Low cost? by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 4, Informative

      AMD has the top 10 of CPU Value Benchmarks. of available CPUs. I've been looking at upgrading my AM2 system and my final choice came down to the top 2 CPUs before I even found that list.

      I think Intel has 4 out of the top 30 on that list. Intel does not have parts similar to AMD performance wise for the same price.

  2. 1090T by cosm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have a 1090T in my main home/dev machine. It is excellent. Gaming, video encoding, whatever. Combined with a boot SSD and 6GB of DDR3, couldn't be happier with the system. Beats the hell out of a standard consumer box, and for the $300 I paid for the 1090, it spanks Intel's offerings (at least did at the time, probably still does). I will say though that consumer boxes are catching up pretty quickly, and their price/performance seems to have plummeted enough to compete with independent system builders (still don't get the feel good feeling).

    If your building a new box with an X6, make sure the BIOS supports 'em. When I bought mine along with a new motherboard, I didn't check, turned out it only supported quads out of the box. I was in such a rush to see the CPU in action, I went to best-buy, bought a machine that had an X4, put the X4 in my new board so I could flash the board to support X6, and then swapped the CPUs back out. Desperate geek times call for desperate geek measures.

    Note: I didn't return the X4 Best Buy machine, but was seriously tempted to :)

    --
    'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
  3. $100 or $150 may be low cost...$265? by kcbnac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know! My general rule is $100 - I don't buy the Phenoms or other "high-end" models. Last time went with the 2.8GHz quad (Athlon II X4 630)

    I could picture buying the same as a Phenom if the L3 cache would make a big difference for what I ran, but it doesn't make enough of a difference when gaming to be worth the cost.

    I also love how both articles are from PCMag and nothing linking to AMD directly.

  4. Re:Anyone done the upgrade? by hedwards · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yes, it's 10D better.

  5. Re:Problem is.... by hedwards · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Depending upon your definition of power user, that's almost always been the case. I remember there was that brief period when AMD beat Intel to the 1ghz mark, but apart from that the high end stuff from Intel has typically been faster.

    But it's also pretty much always been crazy expensive as well. Most people make their decisions either on marketing or the price/performance ratio. I suppose some people now consider energy efficiency as well.

  6. Re:Problem is.... by Rockoon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dont forget the new breed of folks that build systems based on how quiet they will be. Thats sort of similar to the energy efficiency group, but not quite the same.

    Its actually quite impressive what can be done with just some decent fanless heatsinks.

    Then there are those sick bastards that submerge their computer in mineral oil...

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  7. Re:Funny math. by maxwell+demon · · Score: 5, Funny

    From TFS:

    1090T = $235
    1100T = $265

    "Given that 1090T got the downward nudge in price to $235, however, the 1100T offers slightly better performance for less money."

    Could someone explain the math to me? It seems to me that $265 is more money than $235, but this is probably just advanced math.

    After you bought the 1100T you have slightly better performance, but also have less money.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  8. amd has better chipset choices and lower MB prices by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    amd has better chipset choices and lower MB prices

  9. errr whut? by isopropanol · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmmm... AMD 1090T $279.98 CDN, ... Intel i7 960 $651.98 CDN, .... The $372 difference can buy a whopping GPU, Stack of RAM, or SSD (or contribute to all 3), which will probably make a bigger difference anyways, depending on workload. (Prices from NCIX.com, I am not affiliated with them)