Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: WhiteHawk on February 25, 2006, 07:58:41 AM
-
What is best bang for the buclk. AMD 3700 san diego at $201. Or AMD 3800 manhatten at $300. I guess the question is is the 3800 worth the extra 33% in the price?.
-
I'd say if it's not a 33% increase in speed or performance no. I'd rather spend that $100.00 on more game software or memory, HD etc. rather than a fractional increase in speed.
-
Originally posted by Maverick
I'd say if it's not a 33% increase in speed or performance no. I'd rather spend that $100.00 on more game software or memory, HD etc. rather than a fractional increase in speed.
Thats my thoughts also. Thnx.,
-
Originally posted by WhiteHawk
What is best bang for the buclk. AMD 3700 san diego at $201. Or AMD 3800 manhatten at $300. I guess the question is is the 3800 worth the extra 33% in the price?.
This is a rhetorical question right? For the extra $100 in video card or memory would provide an actual improvement you could see/feel. You aint gona notice 3700-3800.
-
Originally posted by ALF
This is a rhetorical question right? For the extra $100 in video card or memory would provide an actual improvement you could see/feel. You aint gona notice 3700-3800.
Do you know for a fact that the 3700 and 3800 are not noticeably different outside of the 100 bucks? I wouldnt think the difference would be worth 100 bucks, but why the spike in dollars? Maybe theres a cache thing going on or something. I dunno. Like the guy said, ask a lot of questions before you buy.
-
Ahh yes. Upon further review it looks like the manchester, (i called it the manhatten earlier) has twice the l1 and l2 cache that the san diego has. I dont know what effect cache has on gaming. So i guesss that is what the quesiton boils down to. is the extran 64 KB cache on l1 and l2 worth 100 bucks?
-
"Manchester" and "Toledo" are the names of AMD X2 chips. The 3800+ Manchester is a Dual Core model. That's where the extra $100 comes in. The single-core 3800+ chips are code-named "Venice" and "Newcastle"
-
The price diff is because one is dual core. Which will make exactly zero difference in most gaming situations and isnt worth the extra $100. By the time dual core is worth getting that 3800 will be considered slow anyway....and yes I know that there is no real gameplay improvement from a 3700 to a 3800.....and certainly an extra $100 in video card would provide a real and very noticable improvement. :aok
-
Originally posted by ALF
The price diff is because one is dual core. Which will make exactly zero difference in most gaming situations and isnt worth the extra $100. By the time dual core is worth getting that 3800 will be considered slow anyway....and yes I know that there is no real gameplay improvement from a 3700 to a 3800.....and certainly an extra $100 in video card would provide a real and very noticable improvement. :aok
Thank you :). Excellent answer.
-
From another post by Skuzzy -
"Aces High II is one of a few games in the industry who do make true use of multi-threading."
Therefore it will make use of dual cores or dual CPU's.
-
What is the purpose of a dual core. Is that the equivelant of Hyper threading? Does it help in multi tasking or what?
-
A dual core means you have two separate CPUs so that one can be doing one task and the other a different task simultaneously. I think Suzzy said AH lets one core do the networking task while the other core does the game tasks like rendering. Hyperthreading (HT) is sort of like that, it allows some kind of "free lunch" type of multithreading but with a single CPU. In reality I think it's just, well, hype.
-
Slight difference with hyperthreading -
Single CPU but if there are 'spare cycles' it will assign them to a different task.
From a description -
"Called "hyperthreading," the new technology essentially takes advantage of formerly unused circuitry on the Pentium 4 that lets the chip operate far more efficiently--and almost as well as a dual-processor computer. With it, a desktop can run two different applications simultaneously or run a single application much faster than it would on a standard one-processor box. "
Dual Core
Two CPU's on one die.
From a description -
"A dual-core CPU combines two independent processors and their respective caches and cache controllers onto a single silicon chip, or integrated circuit"
With AH2 the threads that are multi-threading/hyperthreading aware are run on different 'cores'.
-
Yea, its kinda confusing cuz the amd 3700 san diego says hyper threading is supported. I was thinking dual core was amd's hyper threading but it must be completely different. Oh well, I ordered the 3700 san diego for 213 bucks. Next up, RAMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM:t .
-
3700 can't support hyperthreading, it's only a single core.
Good ram -
2x1Gb (total 2Gb) - $229.99-$30 MIR = $199.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16820146425
-
Originally posted by Kev367th
3700 can't support hyperthreading, it's only a single core.
Good ram -
2x1Gb (total 2Gb) - $229.99-$30 MIR = $199.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16820146425
Ahhh, yes. It says hyper-TRANSPORT support...yes. Hmmm, wth is that? And do I need 2 gig of ram? Ive never even approached my 1 gig RAM now, that I know of? Is the high graph detail require that much more RAM?
BTW, thnx for the help here. :aok My wife gets nervous when I spend her cabinet/kitchen floor money on my, 'really dont need another computer' project.
-
Hypertransport -
Because the memory controller is on the CPU there is no front side bus. Hypertransport (HTT) is the communication between the CPU and the various buses etc.
As for 2Gb - Well to get the most out your socket 939 you need 2 sticks of memory so it runs in "Dual Channel" mode.
So if you only get 1Gb you need 2x512Mb sticks.
Later when you upgrade them it is not recommended to get another 2x512Mb and populate all 4 memory slots as you have to slow the memory down.
So by getting 2x1Gb sticks now you bypass the upgrade without the extra cost of the 2x512Mb.
Also with 2Gb it is possible to cache all the skins and AH2 itself in system memory.