what are you spewing about? dont judge the chip till you try it. 8oOriginally Posted by 'not5150',index.php?page=Thread&postID=150895#post 150895
Hard drive i/o. I know the i7 has a built-in memory controller.Originally Posted by 'Nairi',index.php?page=Thread&postID=150888#post15 0888
Originally Posted by 'not5150',index.php?page=Thread&postID=150530#post 150530
The current crop of Core i7 are 4 physical cores with hyperthreading to make it look like 8 logical cores.
And previous posters are correct in that multiboxing is not cpu limited. Your current quad-core LGA775 Core 2's are more than adequate for the job. If you're experiencing slow downs, it's your graphics card and i/o.Hard drive i/o or the whole cpu/mobo i/o?Originally Posted by 'not5150',index.php?page=Thread&postID=150530#post 150530
Heh, you really don't know where I work do you?![]()
You want to spend serious bucks on the newest gear... I understand that. I've gone down that road before.
But, you'll soon find a point of diminishing returns and the Core i7 won't be the silver bullet that you are looking for. I know, I'm staring at a few Core i7 cpus/mobos at work and a shiny new Falcon Northwest machine. Great for video rendering, but guess what folks still laggy in Shatt because of ... you got it ... a hard drive.
Good chip, yup. But multiboxing WoW isn't CPU limited, especially with regular quad-core. You may get a few frames per second increase. If this justifies spending the thousands of bucks on a new machine, then more power to you.
i7 increases i/o proformance with built in memory controller, this allows for more head room for GPUS and devices...
Lets not forget the tripple channel DDR3.
instead of going back and forth with this 'its not the cpu its the gpu' lets see some benchmarks people.
btw hard drive i/o can easily be avoided get some ultra fast ssd with crazy i/o or multiple harddrives per sessions.
As the previous poster said, go for the sweet spot. Buy the gear that will get you the most overall performance increase for your buck.
Spending $2500 to $3000 on a new Core i7 system for maybe 10% to 30% frame rate increase doesn't make sense to me when I can buy a $600 SSD to get the same effective performance increase. Your system is only as fast as the slowest component and don't let any shiny marketing exec tell you otherwise.
The rules change if you have unlimited money. When you're in that situation, then go buy the i7 AND an SSD and rock on.
In the business we have something called "Vendor Kool-Aid". PR and marketing dangle something shiny in your face and they want you to write a certain way. Critical thinking and skepticism goes a long in countering that.
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