PsychoFish
New member
Ok, so after wanting to smash someone's head though a brick wall I'm posting this to ensure more people know the real differences and we can do some Mythbusting®
1st on my list Intel Xeon processors are faster than Intel Core i5/i7 processors
Quick answer : BUSTED, they use the same underlying architecture
Long answer :
Although they are fundamentally the same
So yes, if you want a CPU than can run at 80+% load 24/7 at a relatively decent temperature the Xeon is for you. But in terms of pure bang for your buck (performance/$) the i5/i7 is the way to go.
Myth 2: ECC RAM (Error-correcting code memory) is better than non-ECC RAM
Fact: ECC RAM at the same clock speed as non-ECC RAM is actually slower
Fact: ECC RAM is more expensive than non-ECC RAM
Fact: ECC memory is used in most computers where data corruption cannot be tolerated under any circumstances, such as for scientific or financial computing.
Is it better? Yes?
Do you want in in a gaming PC? No
Do you need it for Excel? No
Do you need it at all in your workstation? Not unless the work you're doing requires massive amounts of in memory number crunching which requires an extremely high level of accuracy.
Myth 3: AMD CPUs are slow
NOPE NOPE NOPE, AMD CPUs are not slow, not at all. In pure terms of performance/$ the AMD wipes the floor with an i7. The real issue as to why they can be perceived as slow is a fundamental architecture/design issue which can cause the CPU to under perform under certain conditions where applications heavily rely on multi-core processing.
1st on my list Intel Xeon processors are faster than Intel Core i5/i7 processors
Quick answer : BUSTED, they use the same underlying architecture
Long answer :
Although they are fundamentally the same
- TDP (Thermal Design Power) on the Xeon is lower than that of a comparable i5/i7
- Xeon processors do not ship with embedded Intel GPUs
- Xeon processors support multi-socket configurations
- All Xeon processors are HT (HyperThreading) enabled
- Xeons are designed to run at high load for extended periods of time
- The Xeon processors CANNOT BE OVERCLOCKED
- Xeons have much, much more L3 cache than a comparative i5/i7
- Only Xeon processors support ECC RAM
So yes, if you want a CPU than can run at 80+% load 24/7 at a relatively decent temperature the Xeon is for you. But in terms of pure bang for your buck (performance/$) the i5/i7 is the way to go.
Myth 2: ECC RAM (Error-correcting code memory) is better than non-ECC RAM
Fact: ECC RAM at the same clock speed as non-ECC RAM is actually slower
Fact: ECC RAM is more expensive than non-ECC RAM
Fact: ECC memory is used in most computers where data corruption cannot be tolerated under any circumstances, such as for scientific or financial computing.
Is it better? Yes?
Do you want in in a gaming PC? No
Do you need it for Excel? No
Do you need it at all in your workstation? Not unless the work you're doing requires massive amounts of in memory number crunching which requires an extremely high level of accuracy.
Myth 3: AMD CPUs are slow
NOPE NOPE NOPE, AMD CPUs are not slow, not at all. In pure terms of performance/$ the AMD wipes the floor with an i7. The real issue as to why they can be perceived as slow is a fundamental architecture/design issue which can cause the CPU to under perform under certain conditions where applications heavily rely on multi-core processing.