- Joined
- Sep 19, 2012
- Messages
- 615 (0.14/day)
System Name | [WIP] |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Pentium G3420 [i7-4790K SOON(tm)] |
Motherboard | MSI Z87-GD65 Gaming |
Cooling | [Corsair H100i] |
Memory | G.Skill TridentX 2x8GB-2400-CL10 DDR3 |
Video Card(s) | [MSI AMD Radeon R9-290 Gaming] |
Storage | Seagate 2TB Desktop SSHD / [Samsung 256GB 840 PRO] |
Display(s) | [BenQ XL2420Z] |
Case | [Corsair Obsidian 750D] |
Power Supply | Corsair RM750 |
Software | Windows 8.1 x64 Pro / Linux Mint 15 / SteamOS |
It barely edges out a dual-core in heavily threaded tasks, and is only on par for Llano when it comes to heavily threaded tasks. It sounds as though the FX chips will be exactly what I said in every other thread--Phenom II's IPC but higher clocked and support for more threads. That won't make it better than Intel offerings, but it will be quite close in terms of value--at least until Haswell launches.
Core i3-3220 != dual core CPU
Pentium G2120 = dual core CPU
You see, just how AMD's Bulldozer modules are "less" than what we're used to CPU cores being until now, so are Intel's Hyper-Threading enabled CPUs "more" than what physical CPU cores stand for. In a sense, they're both pseudo quad core CPUs.
Either way, they're competitive with Intel's IB i3s, seeing as how they manage to score CPU "wins" enough times here and there, are a tad cheaper than them (especially than the i3-xxx5 ones, that come with HD4000), can be overclocked as opposed to Intel and especially, dominate everything integrated GPU-wise.
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