I have i5 4690k which should last me fine for gaming. I do need multithreading for some software development, but I have been using OpenGl and the GPU for most things(programming Monte Carlo simulations of physical systems.)
I have i5 4690k which should last me fine for gaming. I do need multithreading for some software development, but I have been using OpenGl and the GPU for most things(programming Monte Carlo simulations of physical systems.)
JRPGfan said:
And Intel have come out and said they are not working on improveing IPC anymore, but mostly focusing on reduceing power usage of their CPUs. The thing that worries them the most is ARM IPC growing and a desktop version ending up becomeing popular.
If you have like a intel 6700k, chances are your set for the next 10years or something. I have a weak cheap G3258 @4.2ghz (haswell dual core)..... but honestly even for me, thats enough for most things.
Also with DX12 and vulkan, CPU usage needed for games is going to drop alot. |
True, but that might bite them in the end, especially on the server side where not only power consumption, but raw computing power is a must. I think, in a decade or 2, Intel will face problems from IBM's Power CPU's again.
Locknuts said:
From what I've read that's a pretty good overclock for that CPU. What sort of temps do you get while gaming? |
60-62°C @ 4.5 GHz in Prime95 In-place large FFT´s. Gaming is a few degrees lower. Thermalright Silver Arrow SB-E with 140mm fan at 5V (very silent).
I have one of those faulty 3770K's that didn't transmit the heat properly from the DIE to the HS. I shaved it off with a razor blade and used liquid metal as the thermal compound. Quite risky, but it improved the temperatures by ~17°C.
Ganoncrotch said: Heh, Intel do certainly know how to make a good chip, I'm still a generation behind you again with a 9 year old Core2Quad (2 years of it's life have been spent running WoW for me, sad times) which has never had too much issues handling the majority of games, Considering its age (it was costly before) but it definitely shoots holes through every "you gotta upgrade a gaming PC every 15 minutes" argument that I read. |
Yep, they're seriously affordable now and the boost in overall performance you get for general tasks is ridiculous.
I was running a 60GB SSD in RST with a mechanical drive until last year, but nothing compares with a nice big SSD.
episteme said:
60-62°C @ 4.5 GHz in Prime95 In-place large FFT´s. Gaming is a few degrees lower. Thermalright Silver Arrow SB-E with 140mm fan at 5V (very silent). I have one of those faulty 3770K's that didn't transmit the heat properly from the DIE to the HS. I shaved it off with a razor blade and used liquid metal as the thermal compound. Quite risky, but it improved the temperatures by ~17°C. |
That's awesome. Good temps too.
I'm in a similar boat. I built a PC for Skyrim and put in a 2500K. I upgraded the GPU to an AMD HD7870 a few months later and haven't really felt the need to upgrade since.
The 2500K really is an amazing CPU and even with the old GPU I'm still nearly maxing most games at 1920 x 1080.
I'll probably upgrade the GPU when the next batch of nVidia chips arrive, but I still don't see the need to update the CPU.
Have an i5 series in my PC as well, the period around 2010 is when things shot up for PC tech as I think Crysis raised the bar on pushing tech so CPUs and GPUs were being produce to run games of that standard as a minimum. The result is that the tech released has now got a ridiculously long shelf life even though new tech is still rapidly being produced resulting in powerful tech becoming cheaper, an i5 and any good GPU will probably see you through even the gen after this one.
Locknuts said:
Well that sucks.... |
But. But. Now you can rock your Sandy forever...
“Simple minds have always confused great honesty with great rudeness.” - Sherlock Holmes, Elementary (2013).
"Did you guys expected some actual rational fact-based reasoning? ...you should already know I'm all about BS and fraudulence." - FunFan, VGchartz (2016)
Scoobes said: I'm in a similar boat. I built a PC for Skyrim and put in a 2500K. I upgraded the GPU to an AMD HD7870 a few months later and haven't really felt the need to upgrade since. The 2500K really is an amazing CPU and even with the old GPU I'm still nearly maxing most games at 1920 x 1080. I'll probably upgrade the GPU when the next batch of nVidia chips arrive, but I still don't see the need to update the CPU. |
Honestly if you OC that gpu (your 7870), your probably set until 2020 :p
Any multiplat that comes out will aim for high settings & 1920x1080 on consoles, and chances are pretty good your PC will be able to play those games at simular graphics as smoothly.