i am going to be building a new computer soon i dont need it for heavy gaming or real heavy uses but i want to know which cpu to get i am thinking of the amd 2500 or would the celeron 2.6 be better because they are around the same price
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i am going to be building a new computer soon i dont need it for heavy gaming or real heavy uses but i want to know which cpu to get i am thinking of the amd 2500 or would the celeron 2.6 be better because they are around the same price
I'd go with the Athlon 2500+ Barton core, that's what I have now, and it's quite a nice CPU, Celeron would be alright if you aren't planning on any gaming, but I still prefer the AMD
the fsb on the celeron is 400mhz and the amd its 333mhz wouldnt that make a difference
haha no. And you will make your 333Mhz core a 400Mhz core soon enough :P GO WITH THE AMD. Dont get Celeron. It has a small L2 Cache (pronounced cash) which makes it slower.
Get the AMD 2500+. It's more powerful.
@bigdawg, It's not right to assume that everyone will overclock their systems.
yeah i know..thats why i stuck the tounge out..it was kind of a joke...but he should newayz
That's only your opinion.Quote:
but he should newayz
May I remind you that he didn't ask if he should overclock. Why don't you let him decide that on his own?
He is just trying to compare 2 products.
And not everyone has the money to buy all the cooling you have ;)Quote:
Originally posted by Virtualbody1234@19 January 2004 - 17:16
That's only your opinion.Quote:
but he should newayz
May I remind you that he didn't ask if he should overclock. Why don't you let him decide that on his own?
He is just trying to compare 2 products.
if i dont overclock is the amd 2500 still better and how much could the celeron (2.6ghz) be overclocked w/o any extra fans jus da 1 dat comes wit the cpu
:ghostface:
If you dont overclock, the AMD will still be better. Definently get the AMD. If you plan on overclocking...The AMD is freaking awesome for that.
Okay, first off, a 2.6 Celeron would perform roughly equivlent to an AMD 2000+ I believe. Same with my old 2.2Ghz Celeron, it performs onpar with an AMD 1700+ on nearly every benchmark.Quote:
Originally posted by OnYx@19 January 2004 - 22:32
if i dont overclock is the amd 2500 still better and how much could the celeron (2.6ghz) be overclocked w/o any extra fans jus da 1 dat comes wit the cpu
:ghostface:
As for overclocking, you could if youwanted overclock the 2.6 Celeron to probably 3.4Ghz or so, with VERY good Ram, and proper cooling. The celerons only really come into their value when they are overclocked.
But in that same aspect, you can buy only moderately more expensive Ram, (3200Ram instead of 2700 that the 2500+ barton uses pretty much natively in a sense, because of the matching 333Mhz of both prodcuts.) But anyway, with just slightly higher ram, and even using your stock cooler, you can overclock your AMD 2500+ to 3200+ speeds, which would of course blow away that Celeron again.
I'd go with the 2500+ if I were you.
The 2500+ is still more powerful whichever way you look at it.Quote:
Originally posted by OnYx@19 January 2004 - 21:32
if i dont overclock is the amd 2500 still better and how much could the celeron (2.6ghz) be overclocked w/o any extra fans jus da 1 dat comes wit the cpu
:ghostface:
I always thought it was pronounced like k-a-e-ch like the word case with a sh at the end :huh:Quote:
Cache (pronounced cash)
This is completely dependent upon the cooling in the new case that you buy.Quote:
Originally posted by OnYx@19 January 2004 - 19:32
if i dont overclock is the amd 2500 still better and how much could the celeron (2.6ghz) be overclocked w/o any extra fans jus da 1 dat comes wit the cpu
Even running at stock speeds, both CPUs will generate a fair amount of heat...the Intel a bit less, but still enough that your overall case cooling will be very important.
I am not that familiar with stock Intel heatsinks, but AMD mixes theirs up seemingly at random, so looking into a aftermarket HSF unit would be a good idea.
At any rate, your CPU cooling is only as good as your case cooling will allow.
Nope, it's pronounced pretty much exactly like 'cash'; it comes from the French "cacher" (to hide). In general terms a 'cache' is somewhere where you hide or store things - like a pirates' cache on a desert island.Quote:
Originally posted by Evil Gemini@20 January 2004 - 07:39
I always thought it was pronounced like k-a-e-ch like the word case with a sh at the end :huh:Quote:
Cache (pronounced cash)
Yea I always thought you pronounced it like CASHEY (not cashi lol) like the eeeeeeeeey.
I stand corrected :o