If you don't know how and where use available cores, probably you don't need these
The applications one uses will either know (and benefit), or not, right? MY personal knowledge probably doesn't matter.
lol, that's also true.
I like the old saying "buy cheap, buy twice."
Indeed. I've always bought systems that were a bit behind the curve, and thus much cheaper.
Spending $1500 every 3 years is likely to make me a lot happier than spending $5k every 10 years!Especially since the non-CPU components tend to go obsolete nearly as fast, making "I'll just upgrade the slow component" pretty useless.
The first step is realizing that you don't NEED to have the fastest thing around. (Unless you have a specific need where differences DO matter. In which case you need a benchmark for THAT application.)
Sure, but I'm only going to be spending about $1000 or so, and it's been over 5 years since the last time I upgraded. I guess I'm ahead of the curve, right?
That budget includes a new PSU, new AIO water cooler, CPU, and motherboard. I just purchased a Seasonic Platinum SSR-750PX PSU, and I'll probably get a Corsair H115i cooler.
I completely agree about not needing the fastest, which is I why I won't consider AMD threadripper or Intel X-series. The reason I'm concerned with the timing regarding the zen3 / X670 crap is that chances are they will be nearly the same in price, or very close. I'm sure there will be $500 or less Ryzen 4X00X chips, and plenty of choices for X670 boards under $400. The same thing happens EVERY generation with intel. The processors change, the prices are usually the same.
If I don't wait for the next gen chips, I will get either one of the following:
Ryzen 9 3900X and
ASUS ROG X570 Crosshair VIII Hero ($760 total)
vs
i9-10900K and either the
GIGABYTE Z490 VISION D or
ASUS ProART Z490-CREATOR 10G ($810 to $830 total)
I like both of the Intel boards better, and both are cheaper than the AMD board. The price difference isn't significant enough between those options to be a factor either. The Gigabyte Z490 board does support PCIe 4.0, though I would need to wait until the next generation CPU to have support for it.
Thanks,
Josh