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At what needs would you say the 2011 worth it?
Gaming + Computing & no overclocking: H87 Board + e3 1230 v3 (~290 €)
Based to the one you showed, what do you think about this one?http://pcpartpicker.com/p/26H9mI didn't plan to buy the device either as if I really want to open something, there is the laptop for it.250GB HDD is more than enough for me, combined with an SSD it is perfect.About the case, I love the look of those NZXT Phantom cases.
The EVGA GPU is more expensive, has a lower clock speed and worse cooling, which leads to more fan noise at strong usage.Cases are always a matter of taste. The Phantom isn't bad but overpriced only for it's visuals. Savings potential right here if you really care about maximum system performance.The PSU is good, but imo too expensive as well. Any other be quiet! or Seasonic one at 500 W will do, as long as all required connectors are available. This shouldn't be a component to spare on though.
The i7 4770K has no advantages apart from easy overclocking (only in addition with a Z87 chip motherboard!!) and the useless iGPU. If you don't need that, the Xeon is the better and cheaper option at same performance.
What the flying fuck are you saying, Andre.
Indeed the e3 is far cheaper, but I hope you know that for gaming it performs at the same level, or even worse, than an old 2600. Could be better for computing, yes, but as for gaming it's going obsolete really soon.
If you wanna go further, the e3 series instruction set is limited to handle with big loads and high data traffic, having a limited set of instructions makes the instruction bank hardware smaller and providing more physical space for the multiplexers/ULA, register bank, memory bank and so on, which, by consequence, makes it run colder and being more proper for 24hr sections without having to rely on architecture design for better cooling, thus, making it cheaper. It does not support every assembly instruction as the i3, i5, i7, which, in some cases, could lead to not having the optimal performance in a game/non-server application properly optimized for desktop CPUs.
No, cases are not only visuals since being capable of having a decent cable-management and good air-flow can get you lower temps in basically everything. Phantom is a god-tier case in terms of cable-management and airflow. It also has the looks, and the extra space in between HDD docks, atx and PSU will give you lower temps.
QuoteNo, cases are not only visuals since being capable of having a decent cable-management and good air-flow can get you lower temps in basically everything. Phantom is a god-tier case in terms of cable-management and airflow. It also has the looks, and the extra space in between HDD docks, atx and PSU will give you lower temps.I didn't say cases don't matter at all, but there's way cheaper and still decent ones. Imo that's a waste of cash if you can get all these features for less.
I can find countless benchmarks where it performs worse, or better.
Games especially often are either coded for AMD/Intel/NVIDIA hardware.
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