Who mentioned DDR3?? There are as many 785G DDR2 boards as there are DDR3 ones, and they cost the same.
Of course, he would keep the same memory.
Correct, but the AM2+/DDR2 platform is just as "almost-dead" as the 775 platform that he already has, so it makes no sense to move to AM2+ from 775. As I already pointed out.
Far Cry 2, you say?
[url]http://img19.imageshack.us/img19/1548/gaming03.png[/URL]
Unless he's playing @1024*768, everything is just graphics limited. The core
i5 gets a 9 fps advantage (62fps for 620, 71fps for i5).
And The Q9400 is a lot slower than the Phenom II 945 @3.1 GHz, which only has an 8fps advantage over the Athlon II X4 620.
Yeah, I guess you can look at benchmarks that don't even have the Q9400 listed...
Or we could look at a direct comparision between the two processor:
http://www.anandtech.com/bench/default.aspx?p=106&p2=76
Funny how the 620 doesn't top the Q9400 in a single test...
If you don't like Anandtech, look at the 620 review here, it doesn't have a Q9400 in it, but it does have a Q
8200, which manages to pretty much match the 620 despite being clocked 300Mhz lower and having 2MB less cache than the Q9400...
So again, going with the 620 combo, same price...worse performance...still an almost-dead platform...
Going with the Intel upgrade wouldn't exactly be paying more for less here would it?
Any, and I mean any 785G motherboard will overclock the Athlon II 620 to over 3.3GHz.
I overclocked my 620 in my HTPC to 3.3GHz in an Asrock 780G, with old-as-hell DDR2 533MHz memory sticks (in a non-officially supported 2*1GB + 2*512MB configuration) -> with the default bios.
Not likely. Even the review here shows the 620 only managing 3.6GHz on a 790FX board, one of the best overclocking boards for AM3 processor out there actually. On the same token, I've seen a good
790X only manage 3.1GHz.
So, sorry, but a cheap bundled 785G board is not likely to hit anything higher than 3.2GHz. It might happen, but it isn't likely.
Everything is pointing to what??
Here,
straight from AMD:
Did you even read the article?
No where does AMD actually say AM2+ will be support. In fact the only part that even hints at it that actually comes from AMD is:
"We are all about platform longevity and long-lived upgrade paths"
The articles auther seems to have taken it upon himself to assume that means AM2+ will be support, but I don't see anything offical from AMD. I would think, if they had actually made a direct statement as such, we would see something like "Our Haxa-Core processor will not only support AM3, with an integrated DDR3 memory controller, but also support AM2+ with an integrated DDR2 memory controller". Instead we get an indirect "We are all about platform longevity and long-lived upgrade paths"...
Plus, a littl further in the article, we see mention that the new processor will have an integrated DDR3 memory controller...with no mention of an DDR2 controller...thats odd, I would expect, while they were on the topic of memory controllers and mentioning what the processor will have, they would actually mention a DDR2 memory controller if it had one...
Oh, and of course there is the little blurb about it being a deriviative of the sic-core opteron release already...which lacks a DDR2 memory controller...
You think I'd be wrong about the first step in my whole point?
Yes.
You seem to have made an assumption, or believed the assumptions of others. Personally, I don't assume anything based on very vague statements, I wait until it is made official.
However, I will say that the desktop market tends to shadow the server market, and AMD has already dumped DDR2 on the server side, so it isn't a bad assumption to assume that AM2+ won't be supported much longer. Even if, and that is a big if, it is supported with the next six-core chips, it likely won't be support after those...
Basically, your whole argument is to do a platform change, for the same amount of money, which would yield worse performance at stock, and worse performance overclocked, simple because there is a very slight chance that AM2+ might see six-core processors, which the OP will probably never need considering he is still looking at a dual-core as a possibility... Again, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me. Face it, AM2+ is pretty close to being dead, it might be ever so slightly less "almost-dead" as 775, but it ain't too far behind.