- Joined
- Mar 6, 2012
- Messages
- 569 (0.12/day)
Processor | i5 4670K - @ 4.8GHZ core |
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Motherboard | MSI Z87 G43 |
Cooling | Thermalright Ultra-120 *(Modded to fit on this motherboard) |
Memory | 16GB 2400MHZ |
Video Card(s) | HD7970 GHZ edition Sapphire |
Storage | Samsung 120GB 850 EVO & 4X 2TB HDD (Seagate) |
Display(s) | 42" Panasonice LED TV @120Hz |
Case | Corsair 200R |
Audio Device(s) | Xfi Xtreme Music with Hyper X Core |
Power Supply | Cooler Master 700 Watts |
Yes, I want to thank all the early adopters of Ryzen who suffered through the uncertainty and doubt while trying to get it to boot, and then the blue screens/crashes every time they changed a BIOS setting, and all the memory problems. Without these brave pioneers, forging ahead in the face of major setbacks, Intel would still be sitting fat and greedy, laughing all the way to the bank, instead of all worried and talking about crazy price drops. The better Ryzen gets, the cheaper my next Intel system will be. Rock on AMD!
Stop embarrassing yourself, my Intel i5 4670K @ 5GHZ (4.8GHZ daily driver) can't keep up against my friend's R7 1700 @ 4 GHZ, I personally tweaked it. Its using 3200MHZ RAM and its a day and night difference in performance when using multi thread applications. Also in gaming its usually ahead of my system. The problem you are describing are happening to very limited people with very specific mobo manufactures and who doesn't face problems on new platform ? Remember Intel had similar issues when they launched Nehalem - TLB bug, Haswell - USB bug, Sandy Bridge -SATA bug to name the few?