I was avoiding gettting involved in the AMD/Intel debate but I guess i'm a fool for the bait, it's as logical as the Android/Apple debate.
Let's just say that for high end CPUs, AMD hold the top 17 benchmarks, with intel appearing with 1 chip at number 18, then another 10 places from AMD before another intel appears again. Price per performance the charts are similar.
Four of my home pc's are AMD, 2 are Intel, and they all work well although the intel ones are pretty old now. One of our pc's is a Lenovo Legion 7 AMD laptop and it kicks a lot of desktops out of the park, it's fantastically built and solid as hell for gaming.
We have 25 Dell intels at work, that are about 4 or 5 years old and they are slow and horrible to use in comparison. Although they are bearable, i'm probably the only one that notices they are just not as snappy. I kinda despise Dell as a brand, probably because we are forced to use them at work and I think they're overpriced. I think 3 or 4 of the Dells we bought are now sitting idle and broken upstairs, psu failures,mobo failures etc. Same applies to their gaming range and Alienware imo.
I guess it depends what you want to use it for. That's not to say that you can't have an Intel Gaming Rig, many people do, although pretty much all gamers I know use Ryzens.
My old FX chip for example lasted 10 years, and then sold on for 60 quid or so and I assume it's still going strong in it's new life. That said if you want to type docs in word on the train, perhaps intel is better. I'm sure theres pros and cons to both and I don't have a hate of intel, more a love of AMD, but then I prefer AUDI to BMW as well, call me weird.
Yeah was gonna say their printers were pretty good in my experience.
I’m probably the odd one out lol. I like Dell’s businesses line Latitude/Precisions they seemed to last at least for us, still have corporate hand me downs a decade old without issues, and if you speak to the right people (and the right way) even as an individual you can get steep discounts vs listed pricing at times. HP’s (computers only) quality is the one that I’m usually most skeptical about based family experience.
I do like reading all the contrasting experiences between all of us on this thread though on various things lol. In a positive sense.
True you have to buy re-inked cartridges which are pretty cheap but it’s a game with firmware updates blocking them - hence preventing updates. You have others like Epson that are like that too.
For home use I have a few slightly modified and specific model Brother printers. Ink refill 400ml is under 1/2 price HP charges for one set of cartridges. I encourage my family members to print in full color because the sheet of paper is sometimes more expensive than the ink used.
That`s until they introduce major architecture changes, which may also introduce issues requiring them to provide a driver fix. 12th gen`s new hybrid architecture launch wasn`t without issues either.
For me I will stick with AMD, as the platforms have gotten more stable and performance is completely there. The burning up issue is only limited to the X3D parts mainly due to the motherboard makers leaving voltage options open when AMD disabled it on the chips. MSI was the first to update the Bios to lockdown the voltage adjustments due the sensitivity of the V-cache with voltage. The big gaming centric OEMs went a little too crazy this time against AMD's warning
AMD is quite stable especially now as the chipsets are now closely worked on in conjunction with the CPU/APUs. Have never had a problem for the most part. Same can be true of Intel as well. Biggest issue with Intel is that most of their architectures sacrifice power efficiency to match AMD's performance as of late.My experience with a lot of computers and a lot of tinkering over the decades is the Intel CPUs (or more likely, the motherboards they go on) are just less finnicky and the drivers are more mature. The worst I've ever seen with an intel is thermal throttling due to the OEM not doing enough cooling, and that wasn't intel's fault, and doesn't do permanent damage (and isn't even noticed by most people). Have not run into any motherboards or CPUs burning out like AMD seems to have every few years (happening right now even).
Obviously its just my bias from those past experiences, and things change over time, but systems with intel just seem more mature and stable, and the correct drivers for everything are easy to find and install.
My last AMD was a "586" back in like 95 or 96 (actually that one was fine from what I recall), but I've worked on plenty of desktops and laptops with them since then, just always got frustrated dealing with it.
Like I said I think it is more the fact that motherboards and chipsets supporting intel are just more common and more mature. Probably not really an issue with the processors themselves. Both have squeezed amazing power into a tiny chip.
Similar to how I'll never recommend an HP laptop (not the home ones anyway, even the business ones are kinda shoddy). Maybe they've gotten better, but I've fixed so many that developed bad solder joints on the motherboard (have reflowed several mobos in the oven) and other crappy design related problems, like a heat sink that doesn't even make contact with the GPU, wrong thickness thermal pad was used on several I saw. After a few class action lawsuits, it is time to just give up on a company.
I reflowed one in the oven and replaced the silicon thermal pads with copper shims and Arctic silver, it ran for years and they said it was faster than when new (not surprising, as thermal throttling was no longer kicking in constantly).
HP's official fix was to release a BIOS update so the fan ran non stop. If the heatsink isn't even touching the chip, that isn't going to fix it guys.
Of course I lean toward reliability and stability over the absolute highest speed and power. For gamers and overclockers it may be worth the hassle, right now they're neck and neck but other times AMD lets you squeeze a lot more out of it if you're willing to take the risk and deal with all the trial and error.
Prescott P4s and Pentium Ds for example were both pretty notorious for overheating with very sub par / awful performance vs the competition.
Also the Pentium 4s were a nightmare on heat and power and had burn up issues.
AMD is quite stable especially now as the chipsets are now closely worked on in conjunction with the CPU/APUs. Have never had a problem for the most part. Same can be true of Intel as well. Biggest issue with Intel is that most of their architectures sacrifice power efficiency to match AMD's performance as of late.
Also the Pentium 4s were a nightmare on heat and power and had burn up issues. Fast forward and both seem to have different issues with a few aligning with each other. This latest issue seemed to be more on the OEM board makers wanting to compete and one up each other with overclocking features.
Overall AMD's processors are a beast especially in the enterprise market where density, power efficiency, and price/performance matter.
Recall Sudden Northwood Death Syndrome - where elctromigraton would kill the chip after extended overclocking...
(Northwoods and Prescotts would overclock like crazy if I recall if one could keep them cool enough and force enough volts down their pins)
The AMD model actually has a use in the hosting environment too where you want a single machine to host as many VMs as possible and have as much available CPU to divide up, yet I very rarely hear of a multi tenant hosting provider using AMD, likely for the reasons we've discussed, and probably some perception too.
The high core count Epyc chips were also a big benefit for those who ran socket based licensed SW like Oracle...
It's £2.99 a month, or 36 quid a year for 50 pages a month, when I had an epson it was costing about 150 quid a year or more for ink, that and theres no effort, they just send you more ink when your printer is low automatically, a no brainer tbh, great if you have kids doing homework. If they make a profit that's fine with me also it's a great service, that and the printer itself is like 40 quid and ours has lasted a good 3 or 4 years so far.You've lost the ink game. It's an amazing deal for HP. The profits are criminal.
Intel still has issues with their CPUs and the Hybrid design that in the 13th Gen they are just getting a hang of, but still rely on Microsoft for software updates to the CPU schedular. AMD had lingering issues with 1st Gen Zen as it was brand new architecture from the ground up. There was also a little bit of teething problems with Zen 2 as it was their first chiplet CPU and at that time when OEMs came back in full force with design wins. Fast forward and stability has been great on their platforms and their market share continues to grow including in the enterprise. Also the first X3D CPU, the Ryzen 7 5800X3D launched with no issues. The problem this go around, is AMD relaxed strict requirements a little to allow overclocking, but they also did not completely enforce limits with the board partners. This led to your biggest enthusiast board makers going a little overboard without further quality checks or thought into this,Yeah I'm not claiming they have not had issues. The 12th gen before introducing the "efficient cores" was/is actually excellent, a big step up from the 11th gen for the same price point.
My new work laptop actually has the hybrid 12th gen in it and it is working very well, but it is brand new so the bugs have been worked out by now. 2 full power cores with HT and 8 efficient cores without HT, 12 threads total. Sort of a weird arrangement but I guess makes sense for a laptop. First time I looked in task manager at the 12 cores I had to look up to see if it was 6 cores with HT or what, then I realized it was hybrid. Before that I actually thought they had started the hybrid with the 13th gen but I guess the late 12th gen mobile procs was the proving ground.
But that being said, the issues were resolved pretty quickly between Intel and the OEMs. AMD seems to have lingering issues, even if it is potentially the OEMs fault, not giving it as much time as they should since they are less popular. But I'm sure you can find an Intel setup with lingering issues and an AMD one that has been solid from Day 1. I still honestly think it comes down more to the motherboard (and probably the chipset, where Intel really seems to have an advantage for stability) and not to the processor itself.
Intel has been great to on quality of drivers but also experienceed their own share of issues such as vulnerabilities in the CPU (meltdown anyone?)
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