Oh, and Jarrod, socket 2011 doesn't just need to be paired with X79 chipset. I am running my main rig with chipset C602 which also include things like SAS support. At the end of the day, what you pay is what you get.
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Oh, and Jarrod, socket 2011 doesn't just need to be paired with X79 chipset. I am running my main rig with chipset C602 which also include things like SAS support. At the end of the day, what you pay is what you get.
It was pretty clear what was happening when looking at the CPU graphs. The host OS (Windows Hyper-V Server) was allocating two logical cores of the same physical core to the VM instead of prioritising the primary core.
No need to bet, I know the CPU will make a difference with my current rig. But if I go back to when I was running the Radeon 6970 I'm pretty convinced that the new graphics card has given me a bigger FPS boost than an equivalently priced CPU.
Yes, an upgraded GPU will always give you a boost in FPS. A GPU is also the easiest thing to upgrade in a computer. Any gamer, and I mean any gamer, can unplug a GPU and plug in a new one. Now not every gamer has the knowledge, experience, skills and confidence to upgrade things like CPU's or rebuilt a complete system from scratch. Hence my recommendation that for somebody like Paul to get a solid platform and just change the GPU's as and when the games become an issue is a no-brainer. (and still keeping within his budget I should add).
And hence, I agreed with that point ;)
Ps, I see you can now get a TITAN for R7200
http://www.carbonite.co.za/f40/asus-gtx-titan-68190/
Paul the question of AMD vs Nvidia, from what I've read:
AMD + Probable performance boost from Mantle for BF4, cards are good value
AMD - Reference cards are noisy and run hot, Crossfire still sounds like it has more issues than SLi
Nvidia + new cards have support for GSync and Shadowplay, run cooler and quieter than many AMD
Nvidia - slightly more expensive than AMD for similar performance, current versions wont run mantle (might be a + if Mantle is buggy)
Doubt you will go wrong with either.
Mega, AMD cards are no longer as cheap (or good value for money) due to a supply shortage caused by bit coin (and similiar groups) of people using AMD cards for their mining. The demand as such have increased the demand for AMD cards thus causing the prices to increase. They are still marginally cheaper than NVidia, but not quite as much a difference as in the past.
Got an email from Rebeltech, they got a shipment of R9 280X in most other places are out of stock, I think I will get this in the mean time because PC part prices are going to go up as the exchange rate gets worse
http://www.rebeltech.co.za/index.php...ducts_id=11135
(This is R500 cheaper than a 770)