shep48 April 9, 2005 Share shep48 Member April 9, 2005 (edited) amd memory controller is built into the chip, so what ever the speed of the processor thats the speed of your bus. 2.6ghz =2.6ghz bus intel has their memory controller on the motherboard and its only 8o0mhz pcgamer says amd is better for games. "Athlon 64fx-55 is WAY faster in games thanks to its on die memory controller." pcgamer Edited April 9, 2005 by shep48 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cujo April 9, 2005 Share Cujo Member April 9, 2005 a64 are gaming chips. even the lowest a64 can beat the highest intel in most games. in windows you generally won't notice a difference with any modern cpu. what do you use your computer for? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Laz.e.rus April 9, 2005 Author Share Laz.e.rus Member April 9, 2005 primarily gaming now. But I still have about 110 gigs of schtuff. So it'll be fine Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cujo April 9, 2005 Share Cujo Member April 9, 2005 yea amd will be fine then. just making sure you don't do any heavy duty mp3 or divx compression. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wolfsblood April 9, 2005 Share Wolfsblood Member April 9, 2005 Good Luck with your comp upgrades, Laz. These guys are right on about the AMD Athlon64 chips. I also wasn't specifically suggesting buying the system piecemeal, just thought that's the way you were heading. If you need the vid card now for your current system, then AGP would be the way to go. The proc Cujo suggested is almost the same one I have. I got the 939 though. Don't know anything about the DFI Lanparty mobo's though, as the last couple I've bought have been Asus, and I've loved them. Like I said before though, do as much research as you can. Read the manufacturer's websites, check out www.tomshardware.com and other review sites to see what other techheads think about the components you're looking at, ask friends, then change your mind 300 times, (that's what i did) Oh, and you do plan on overclocking that cpu, get the OEM version, and then buy a better HSF, because the stock cooler on those won't take the extra heat, and why pay extra for a heatsink you won't use... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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