Originally posted by: ThunderRoad
Originally posted by: tedinde1
in 2 months we'll be buying them at the AMD auction/sheriff sale . if they dont do something quick with their finances.
And then, sadly, two days later we will see Intel selling the 266Mhz celeron for $400 again.
Originally posted by: Rollo
"AMD 2800 xp performance is better than Intel. this is not expensive compared with Intel CPU. Price is not bad compared with Intel $700.00+, $410 is a reasonable price. " Since when does an Intel 2.8 cost $700?! Last I looked they were $380. on Pricewatch. And what doe you get by spending more money for AMD? http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1718&p=11 Wow, you're right! The 2800+ is 4fps faster at UT2003. I bet you can really tell the difference between 186fps and 182fps. http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1718&p=12 Ooops, on this page the 2800+ gets beat in 2/3 games, although again you could never tell the difference. I went with AMD when I bought my 1GHZ Athlon 2 years ago, and my 1600+ a year ago. (and they weren't even close to $50 then) I don't know what I'm going to do for this years annual upgrade. My KT266A motherboard will take up to a Athlon 2600+. However, they've got them priced so close to Intel now that I don't know I won't try a P4. I've never had to monkey around with motherboard drivers as much with Intel as I have with VIA. (e.g. how many times have you seen try the latest 4 in 1s suggested?)
Originally posted by: Trevelyan
Originally posted by: Rollo
"AMD 2800 xp performance is better than Intel. this is not expensive compared with Intel CPU. Price is not bad compared with Intel $700.00+, $410 is a reasonable price. " Since when does an Intel 2.8 cost $700?! Last I looked they were $380. on Pricewatch. And what doe you get by spending more money for AMD? http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1718&p=11 Wow, you're right! The 2800+ is 4fps faster at UT2003. I bet you can really tell the difference between 186fps and 182fps. http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1718&p=12 Ooops, on this page the 2800+ gets beat in 2/3 games, although again you could never tell the difference. I went with AMD when I bought my 1GHZ Athlon 2 years ago, and my 1600+ a year ago. (and they weren't even close to $50 then) I don't know what I'm going to do for this years annual upgrade. My KT266A motherboard will take up to a Athlon 2600+. However, they've got them priced so close to Intel now that I don't know I won't try a P4. I've never had to monkey around with motherboard drivers as much with Intel as I have with VIA. (e.g. how many times have you seen try the latest 4 in 1s suggested?)
That really is a flawed arguement... If you look at the framerate, by spending $200 more on a 2.8gz P4 as opposed to a 2.4ghz you gain less than 10fps in UT2003.... so you can't really use those game benchmarks to base this decision. I'm not saying that it's cool that the CPU is so expensive, but don't go and say that the performance is not there.
Originally posted by: Rollo
Actually, I think it's a really good argument. We're not talking about bang for buck, what if we buy a couple notches lower. We're comparing the $410 Athlon 2800+ to the ONLY processor it can be compared to, the $380 P4 2.8. When you consider the Athlon costs more, does not perform better, and comes on more troublesome motherboards, it becomes pretty obvious which one is the better choice. Or are you going to say VIA/SIS motherboards are more compatible, industry standard parts than Intel motherboards? Or were you going to say that scraping 2/4 benchmarks is a clear victory? Or that it's better to pay more than less for a comparable product. I didn't say the performance isn't there, it obviously is comparable to a P4 2.8. I am saying that, like it or not, Intel is the industry standard and their boards are easier to set up, as well as compatible with a wider variety of hardware. I'll probably get the AMD 2400 or 2600, just so I don't have to rebuild my box, but I think they should be a little less as we have to put up with non-Intel motherboards.
Originally posted by: Shrooms420
the 2400 = 266mhz
the 2600 += 333mhz
It's a good argument ONLY if the benchmarks were taken with a superhot gfx card, like a GF4 4600 or Radeon 9700, running at 640x480.Originally posted by: Rollo
Actually, I think it's a really good argument.
Originally posted by: Shrooms420
also Ai42 never said this was a hot deal. read the title, he's just letting us know that the 2800 is in stock at Newegg