Sorry I don't agree, when all the components are factored I can build a AMD system for alot less and it will perform just about the same as any Intel system out.
Ok, build your system and lets compare. Not that it matters, you want to make arguments about the general population, but the general popular doesn't build their own machines...
Also if your saying Asus, Gigabyte and Foxcon don't update their bios on older motherboards that's just flat out not true and those three companies make up about 70 percent of all motherboard sales world wide.
Yes, mostly because of OEM systems, and it is up to the OEMs to make the BIOS updates, not ASUS, Gigabyte, or Foxcon.
Also in the real world the performance difference is not at all big, stock clock for stock clock. I have owned both systems with top end components and if you didn't tell me which one was in my computer, example a 945 DDR3 /940 DDR2 or a 920 DDr3 / QX9650 DDr2 I could not tell you what was powering my system. Now overclocked I would see some difference but even that's not giant in the real world. In a benchmark you would but not in the real world. In this case your GPU is more important.
This I agree with, and have said numerous times. It is exactly the reason I am not upgrading my 775 platform to i7, the price simply doesn't justify the next to 0 performance increase I would see. I'm instead focusing on getting my AMD rig up to snuff, mainly in the processor department, as I know I will see a very nice performance boost going from the 4200+ to a Phenom II Quad-core.
Why intel doesn't keep a socket compatible with a new cpu drives me crazy
Given all the new things introduced in the i7/i5 processors I can understand the need for a new socket. It was the transition from DDR to DDR2 requiring a new socket that baffled me...by hey at least they got it right when they moved to DDR3. The fact is though, sockets don't last for ever, 3 years is a good run IMO. Intel needed to move to a new socket to grow. What is driving me crazy is the move to two sockets...that is stupid!
and why they don't sell cpus at or near their max potential for a reasonable price also drives me nutts.
The reason for this is obvious, they don't have to. Without competition prices get insane. The processors they have to keep cheap, they do, the ones that have no competition they charge out the ass for. AMD did the same thing when Intel couldn't compete. The Athlon FX line was outragously priced because the Pentium 4/Ds simply couldn't compete. Asking anyone that paid $1000+ for an FX-60, they will tell you AMD will jack the prices up just as quick as Intel when they can.
Can intel blow AMDs door off the answer is yes? Why they continue to FXXK people with their prices and let AMD hang in there I cannot tell you. The only thing I can come up with is if intel release a I7 at 3.8ghz(stock clock) and priced it at 200.00 AMD might not exist causing a monopoly and the EU might ban them. however as thing currently stand AMD is cheaper.
The reason is that high end CPU sales account for maybe 10% of their total sales, the other 90% going to the mid and low end. AMD is able to compete in these sectors, so Intel has to keep the prices low in those sectors. They could release a 3.8GHz i7 and completely destroy AMD, of course AMD would just drop the price on the 965 to $10 and steal all the sales from Intel. However, doing so would cause both to not make a profit, and they would have to do it for such a large amount of time. Not making a profit gets investors pissed off, not making a profit for long enough time makes investors leave...