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AMD Hardware

AMD Releases Three New Low-Cost CPUs 101

WesternActor writes "With its new Fusion APUs coming out in about a month, you wouldn't think AMD would still be tweaking its processor lineup. But it released three new processors today—the Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition, the Phenom II X2 565 Black Edition, and the Athlon II X3 455—to balance out its price-performance offerings. The Black Edition CPUs with their unlocked multipliers are probably the most interesting, particularly the Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition which has six cores, runs at 3.3 GHz, and costs only $265. As the name implies, the 1100T represents only a minute increase in clock speed over the 1090T. It even has the same amount of L2 and L3 cache (3MB and 6MB, respectively), is based on the same 45nm production process, and is designed for the currently standard AM3 socket. Given that 1090T got the downward nudge in price to $235, however, the 1100T offers slightly better performance for less money."
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AMD Releases Three New Low-Cost CPUs

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  • Low cost? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jewelises ( 739285 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:21PM (#34481128)
    I've heard of marketers redefining price points, but this is ridiculous. I've never paid more than $150 for a processor.
  • 1090T (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cosm ( 1072588 ) <thecosm3 AT gmail DOT com> on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:25PM (#34481158)
    I have a 1090T in my main home/dev machine. It is excellent. Gaming, video encoding, whatever. Combined with a boot SSD and 6GB of DDR3, couldn't be happier with the system. Beats the hell out of a standard consumer box, and for the $300 I paid for the 1090, it spanks Intel's offerings (at least did at the time, probably still does). I will say though that consumer boxes are catching up pretty quickly, and their price/performance seems to have plummeted enough to compete with independent system builders (still don't get the feel good feeling).

    If your building a new box with an X6, make sure the BIOS supports 'em. When I bought mine along with a new motherboard, I didn't check, turned out it only supported quads out of the box. I was in such a rush to see the CPU in action, I went to best-buy, bought a machine that had an X4, put the X4 in my new board so I could flash the board to support X6, and then swapped the CPUs back out. Desperate geek times call for desperate geek measures.

    Note: I didn't return the X4 Best Buy machine, but was seriously tempted to :)
    • Re:1090T (Score:2, Interesting)

      by blair1q ( 305137 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:37PM (#34481296) Journal

      It spanked nothing. It may have been a nudge better in performance at the same price, or $3-5 less for the same performance, but Intel gets a little juice from its brand recognition and power and reliability numbers.

      In those segments where Intel and AMD compete, Intel can make better ASPs than AMD, and manufactures the goods for cheaper per unit. That's why AMD is still dinky and Intel is a behemoth. In those segments where AMD and Intel don't compete head-to-head, you find Intel parts and no AMD parts. AMD has no niche to itself. That's another reason for the dinky/behemoth ratio.

      P.S. Daps for flashing the BIOS just to get a board running under your chip. 3 out of 1000 /.ers would have even considered it, and 1.5 of those would have bricked their system doing it.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:51PM (#34481450)

        Holy shit you're a retard. The last sentence confirmed it.

      • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:15PM (#34481678)
        Thats funny because (A) I have had no trouble getting motherboards that support 6-core AMD's out of the box, (B) Flashing the bios is painless these days unless you are using some shitty assed brand of motherboard, and (C) AMD clearly wins the price/performance competition [cpubenchmark.net] with all of the top-20 being AMD.
        • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:34PM (#34481824)

          I can't remember specifically why but IIRC none of the old AMD motherboards (700 series based) supported the X6 without further BIOS flashing. This is why it pays to watch out for the AMD chipset models, since many of the older AMD boards are still being sold at low cost.

          • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:59PM (#34482018)
            well certainly you need to "be careful" where careful = do a bit of research.

            The newegg comments is actually a very good place to start on that research.

            As far as cheap motherboards.. don't..

            I'm not saying grab the most expensive thing on newegg.. just make sure that the class of board you are getting is well made.. which means not one of the cheapest thing on there (MSI "Military Grade" boards are very solid, but not all that expensive)
            • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @09:23PM (#34482556)

              It's not that they're cheaply made (not always anyway), it's that they're outdated and priced accordingly. Last-gen 785Gs are as low as $60, but are still manufactured. Unfortunately these have more than just BIOS issues; the SB chipset will probably also be old (only a couple mobos have 7xx NB & 8xx SB)... meaning less power efficiency and only SATA2 support, etc.

      • by Eugene ( 6671 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @08:28PM (#34482252) Homepage

        at least for AMD you can use your old motherboard, with Intel you need new motherboard everytime...

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:07PM (#34481630)

      standard consumer box

      Dells sells [dell.com] Phenom II X6 machines for $700. Doesn't get much more 'consumer' than that.

    • by RicktheBrick ( 588466 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @10:59PM (#34483158)
      Computers are my hobby. I did voluntary work for United Devices and now do work for World Community Grid. I have been doing this for over 10 years. I am in the top one tenth of one per cent of the World Community Grid(515th position with more than 515,000 members) Three years ago I purchased a q6600 quad computer hoping to get 3 or 4 times as many results. I was surprised when I got 6 times as many results as a similar speed rated single core computer. I recently purchased a 1090t 6 core bare bones computer($307 on pricewatch) and was again surprised when I got twice as many results as my quads. With this one computer, I now get more than twice as many results than I did with 6 single core computers. I am sure that the electricity cost for that computer is a lot less than than the 6 computers were so I believe that in my case the computer has paid for itself by reducing my electrical bill.
  • by John Hasler ( 414242 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:28PM (#34481196) Homepage

    Fusion Auxillary Power Units? Wow!

    Oh. Overloaded initialism. Damn. Carry on.

  • by Stregano ( 1285764 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:29PM (#34481202)
    I actually bit the bullet when they X3 Black came out. I got it later on in the cycle, and it was a true tri-core and no unlocking of the 4th core. As for price, I paid $200 for it back then. A six core for $200 and I will bite again. I like to buy stuff right when it is on the brink of not being new anymore. That is the fun of pc parts though, it all depends on what you do with your PC. If you are into gaming and most of the games do not support 6 cores, then it is bragging rights only. I promise you in 6 months that $235 price tag will be much lower than $235. I personally do alot with video processing and 3-D animation, so I could use some more cores.
    • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:58PM (#34481522)

      A six core for $200 and I will bite again.

      AMD's first Phenom II 6-core (the 1055T) was $200 when released (they are now $180 on newegg.) Thats a 2.8 ghz with locked multiplier (still highly overclockable, but the bus has to follow)

      MSI motherboards auto-over-clock feature (capped at 20%) has brought several (all, I've built 3 1055T systems) of these up to 3.36 ghz without changing the voltage for me, and when AMD Turbo is being used by the CPU it brings 3 cores up to 4ghz (and down-clocks 3 cores.)

      All of them have been stable with Prime95.

      The unfortunate part is that the stock cooling is kind of weak for the over-clock, requiring either an excellent case fan setup (push-pull straight across, what I opt for) or a better heatsink/fan.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:40PM (#34481336)

    the ... 1100T ... costs only $265... The 1090T [costs] $235 ... the 1100T [costs] less money.

    Wait, $265 is less than $235?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:45PM (#34481386)

    I'm still on 1080P. Is 1090T a worthwhile upgrade?

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:48PM (#34481414) Homepage Journal

    From TFS:

    1090T = $235
    1100T = $265

    "Given that 1090T got the downward nudge in price to $235, however, the 1100T offers slightly better performance for less money."

    Could someone explain the math to me? It seems to me that $265 is more money than $235, but this is probably just advanced math.

    • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:05PM (#34481614)
      The 1090T was running $280 when first released ... so this one at $265 gives you more for your money.. I guess that sort of contrived logic explains it.
    • by maxwell demon ( 590494 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:14PM (#34481668) Journal

      From TFS:

      1090T = $235
      1100T = $265

      "Given that 1090T got the downward nudge in price to $235, however, the 1100T offers slightly better performance for less money."

      Could someone explain the math to me? It seems to me that $265 is more money than $235, but this is probably just advanced math.

      After you bought the 1100T you have slightly better performance, but also have less money.

  • Problem is.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:52PM (#34481466) Homepage

    AMD's 6 Core stuff underperforms the same clock frequency i7 quad core by enough that real power users dont choose AMD right now.

    What I want is both Intel and AMD to drop the BS of "special SMP processors that require all special and expensive stuff.

    3.1ghz 6 core processor X2 on a workstation motherboard using normal ram instead of the craptastic Opterons and the overpriced ECC ram coupled with anal rape priced motherboards.

    • Re:Problem is.... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by hedwards ( 940851 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:00PM (#34481558)
      Depending upon your definition of power user, that's almost always been the case. I remember there was that brief period when AMD beat Intel to the 1ghz mark, but apart from that the high end stuff from Intel has typically been faster.

      But it's also pretty much always been crazy expensive as well. Most people make their decisions either on marketing or the price/performance ratio. I suppose some people now consider energy efficiency as well.
      • Re:Problem is.... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:09PM (#34481642)
        Dont forget the new breed of folks that build systems based on how quiet they will be. Thats sort of similar to the energy efficiency group, but not quite the same.

        Its actually quite impressive what can be done with just some decent fanless heatsinks.

        Then there are those sick bastards that submerge their computer in mineral oil...
      • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:25PM (#34481760) Journal

        When AMD first released the Opteron and x86-64, they beat the pants off Intel, especially in SMP because they had Hybertransport versus Intel's rather dated FSB, not to mention the Netburst architecture which failed to scale to 20GHz.

        Also, the 6100's currently get more FLOPS/socket than Intel, provided your workload can scale from 32 to 48 cores for a 4 socket motherboard. AMD also win on Flops/$, again assuming reasonable scaling.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @03:41AM (#34484414)

        If you'd been paying attention to prices recently ECC unreg 1333 is actually in some cases cheaper than regular DDR3 1333.

        While it doesn't help for people wanting 1600/2000+ speed memory, ECC is definitely not at the premium prices it once was. And while not everyone needs it (Esp if your computer gets shut down at the end of teh day and booted again in the morning), for those of us who have system updates listing into the 'years' category, ECC makes a huge difference for ensuring that system is still running without any long term corruption creeping in.

      • by DarthVain ( 724186 ) on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @09:26AM (#34486036)

        AMD did have the lead once upon a time. Basically they had processors that ran on PAR with Intel (even thumped them in many benchmarks), but sold cheaper. Then Intel came out with the Core 2 Duo and on a smaller die fab than AMD could muster. AMD has never been able to catch up since. About the ONLY thing that makes AMD even slightly attractive is that currently the Intel spec motherboards are still a bit pricier than AMD's offerings. However that difference has been dropping over time, and AMD hasn't made any noticeable advancements. At the reasonable level (i.e. not the razors edge technology) the difference only really amounts to 20-30$ on the MB. So if your looking at total cost, bump up your cost for your AMD cpu by that much and compare. However at the same time start looking at which technology you want to have as well features available. Anyway if I were to buy a chip today, it would be Intel hands down without a doubt in my mind. AMD would have to offer me a big discount in order to convince me to buy theirs.

      • by RzUpAnmsCwrds ( 262647 ) on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @02:19PM (#34491122)

        Depending upon your definition of power user, that's almost always been the case. I remember there was that brief period when AMD beat Intel to the 1ghz mark, but apart from that the high end stuff from Intel has typically been faster.

        AMD was faster from when Athlon 64 was launched (December 2003) to when Core 2 was released (July 2006). But even today AMD is just about at parity with Core 2, and Intel is about to launch Sandy Bridge. Hopefully Bulldozer can change that.

    • errr whut? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by isopropanol ( 1936936 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @09:05PM (#34482456) Journal
      Hmmm... AMD 1090T $279.98 CDN, ... Intel i7 960 $651.98 CDN, .... The $372 difference can buy a whopping GPU, Stack of RAM, or SSD (or contribute to all 3), which will probably make a bigger difference anyways, depending on workload. (Prices from NCIX.com, I am not affiliated with them)
    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @09:57PM (#34482732) Homepage Journal

      AMD's 6 Core stuff underperforms the same clock frequency i7 quad core by enough that real power users dont choose AMD right now.

      For values of 'power user' that don't include low-end high-volume virtualization where core-count is paramount. AMD's 12-core part is nice too (I use it on 'real' servers), but spendy per-core. Getting 6 or 12 cores in an Intel box is far more expensive.

      • by drsmithy ( 35869 ) <drsmithy.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @11:09PM (#34483230)

        For values of 'power user' that don't include low-end high-volume virtualization where core-count is paramount.

        When it comes to virtualisation, RAM is nearly always more important than either core count or speed, unless you're doing something unusual.

        • by Zancarius ( 414244 ) on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @05:02AM (#34484658) Homepage Journal

          When it comes to virtualisation, RAM is nearly always more important than either core count or speed, unless you're doing something unusual.

          And when you buy a cheaper multicore processor from AMD, you can spend the difference on more RAM! :)

        • by QuantumBeep ( 748940 ) on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @09:52AM (#34486496)

          Such as what GP is doing, apparently.

          Many commercial virtualization shops standardize on one VM per core.

          • by drsmithy ( 35869 ) <drsmithy.gmail@com> on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @11:21AM (#34488168)

            Such as what GP is doing, apparently.

            Well he didn't mention doing anything unusual.

            Most people grossly overestimate the overheads of virtualisation, and thus believe they need a lot more CPU than they actually do. Typically, CPU is the _last_ resource you run out of when virtualising.

            Many commercial virtualization shops standardize on one VM per core.

            Like who ? That seems incredibly low to the point of nearly making it uneconomical. We're averaging about 20 VMs on each of our 8-core/16-thread/48GB UCS blades - not a remotely high consolidation ratio in my experience - and the CPU isn't even close to the limiting factor.

        • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @12:18PM (#34489080) Homepage Journal

          When it comes to virtualisation, RAM is nearly always more important than either core count or speed, unless you're doing something unusual.

          Obviously it depends on your workload. Any job that will benefit from CPU cache coherency will appreciate dedicated cores. Something as simple as MySQL replication benefits handsomely. Any kind of compute farm or compile cluster will demand it. If you're doing filesharing and terminal apps, it's definitely overkill.

          Also, remember that we need to have ECC RAM for servers, and with AMD that's built in to the on-chip memory controller. You can have a 6-core cpu+mobo with 8GB of ECC RAM for about 500 bucks @125W in AMD-land. Just the Intel CPU is a thousand bucks - you're at $1500 if you shop wisely for the rest. The Xeon solution needs to thus do 3x better per-clock to break even on the economics (though it gains a little bit back with consolidation through moderately more work-per-cycle and a tiny bit less power consumption (95W for the CPU, but the chipset is hotter).

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @12:24AM (#34483628)

      [Brand x] underperforms the same clock frequency [Brand y]

      Who compares by clock frequency? It's all about dollars vs dollars, watts vs watts, or some mixture thereof.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @06:53PM (#34481478)

    x3 + core unlocker = win

  • by interval1066 ( 668936 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:03PM (#34481596) Journal
    6 cores for $235??? AND at 3.3G? Sign me up.
  • by formfeed ( 703859 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @07:21PM (#34481730)
    let's check Wikileaks to see if there's a good review by the state department.
  • Man, already?! (Score:2, Interesting)

    by John Pfeiffer ( 454131 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @08:00PM (#34482030) Homepage

    Argh! They knocked down the price? I just bought a 1090T last month... Oh well, par for the course. The whole sequence of events was just FRAUGHT with BS. :(

    The motherboard in my primary computer shit itself suddenly and for no apparent reason, and I had to RMA it. This took three weeks for some god-unknown reason considering they didn't 'repair' anything, but instead sent me a different board with a new s/n sticker on it with my serial.

    I finally get the motherboard back only to DROP THE GODDAMN CPU DURING REINSTALLATION. So, when it DIDN'T WORK, I had reason to assume it was the chip. So I bought the 1090T, which I was going to do anyway come February. Since, amazingly, my 3-year old AM2+-based motherboard supports an AM3 hexacore with nothing more than a BIOS update...

    Still nothing. Examining the board, I smelled burning semiconductors...and then burned my finger on a VREG... Yeah, I had WORDS with the tech support about my RMA, believe it.

    Not having another three weeks to piss away, I got a cheap motherboard, and a couple sticks of RAM (Because it takes DDR3) and was back up and running with the 1090T.

    The reason I'm saying all this, is so you have some appreciation for what I went through, to be rewarded with an absolute beauty of a machine with the 1090T at its core. And I'm not being sarcastic, for once. The CPU's a real monster. I have it overclocked to a perfectly stable 4.00GHz, with the STOCK COOLER.

    Renders go fast as anything, and Photoshop CS5 x64 starts up in 2.5 seconds. (Unless I just added some new fonts.)

    Right now, my only limitation is the 4GB of RAM, when my old machine had 8GB. I'll have to do something about that.

    Some nimrods were calling me stupid for buying an AMD, but you look at the price of Intel's chips, and the hexacore offerings start at $900!!! What in all of fuckery?? My whole new mobo+CPU+RAM combo cost a THIRD that! Man, some people...

    • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @08:15PM (#34482144)
      Never buy cheap motherboards. My rule of thumb is two-fold.

      First, the cost of MoBo should never be cheaper than the RAM that is going onto it. Yes this means that all those sub-$100 MoBo's are out of the question if you are going 6+ GB DDR3.

      Secondly, for its SATA and USB feature set, it should not be within 20% of the cheapest board you can find with that same feature set, and never the cheapest of that feature set from that specific manufacturer.

      The first part is more common-sense than anything else, while the second part is avoiding even a hint of warning signs.
  • by camh ( 32881 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @08:57PM (#34482400) Journal

    I was hoping we'd see a 95W X6 available retail sometime soon. I want to build a mini-itx 6-core box, but these are typically limited to 95W parts. There is a 95W X6 manufactured, but it is not available retail (only to OEMS from what I understand).

  • by jameskojiro ( 705701 ) on Tuesday December 07, 2010 @10:42PM (#34483054) Journal

    Someday I will be able to buy it....

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 08, 2010 @01:08AM (#34483828)

    I've been considering upgrading from an old junker PC from around 2005 because it doesn't have the grunt to play The Dark Mod. I'm going to buy AMD, but I'm not buying an AM3 bored because the Bulldozer chips will not work in it. I know what it is like to buy a board just before a standard is fazed out... I made that mistake once and will not make it again.

    So, Please get the AM3 boards out ASAP!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 09, 2010 @06:52AM (#34499052)

    It's already difficult to run four dwarf fortresses in parallel. I think I need a bi-brain or something to handle these 6core CPUs.

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