So.. it seems that AMD has released its new
Bulldozer processors.
I'm debating about which one to purchase, with my new toy only months away now (ohboyohboyohboy). The three options for processors I'd consider are the AMD FX-8150 Bulldozer (8 cores, arranged in pairs that share some resources), the AMD 1100t Black Edition (6 cores, supposedly unlocked for easy overclocking) and the Sandy Bridge Intel Core i7 2600k (4 cores, and the company will pre-overclock it for me; 10% for free, 20% for $30, 30% for $80)
After reading some reviews, I think I'm leaning towards either the 1100t or the 2600k; it seems the Bulldozer is strongest in.. well, applications other than gaming, and since my wife is basically going to be downloading photos and using the internet, gaming performance it what I want. The 2600k seems a bit more powerful and I can get even more by ordering it pre-overclocked but I'm leery of overclocking in terms of long-term serviceability, and I do have a friend who would be only too happy to get his hands on an 1100t to overclock.
On the other hand, I can afford a much bigger SSD if I go with the 1100t, in addition to the traditional HD, and the overall price of the machine will probably be about $75 less. I can also (at the moment) get more free goodies as a bonus with the AMD; 3 games and a 4GB thumb drive although freebies aren't my deciding factor by any means.
The 2600K is also offered with SmartResponse which allegedly uses a small SSD (30-60GB) to greatly improve the performance of the main HD; up to 60% supposedly. While this still wouldn't be as fast as a stand-alone SSD it WOULD mean the entire 2 TB main hard drive would be faster, even if it was 30% faster that would be a noticeable improvement I would think.
I do have to confess though, that because I don't understand a whole lot about pipelines and threads and floating point whatchamacalits and so forth that I tend to start thinking "more cores = better" but then I also recognize clock speed affects it and.. I need a drink. I was originally dead-set on an X58 intel 6 core processer just to have 6 cores until I started looking into Sandy bridge and the 1100t and then Bulldozer came out with 8 cores (so cool!) and..
I'm so confused.