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Competitive Analysis Of AMD & Intel Computers |
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Written by Webmaster
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Tuesday, 24 February 2009 |
By jon crain
Today computer market is no longer dominated by Intel and this can only be a good thing. While Intel certainly has product recognition going for them they also have the stigma of being associated with incredibly high prices.
It was no surprise then when other processor manufacturers started making a name for themselves who while still producing quality products cut the cost of buying decent high powered processor chips by an extreme amount.
AMD are one such company but I would hasten to say that they are not just any company. AMD have made a name for them in the best way. Many AMD users like me would agree that AMD are quite simply better and it is more often than not the case that once you have gone AMD you never look at another brand.
While Intel have the higher profile and advertising at the moment AMD have product loyalty and this would never have happened if their products were not up to scratch.
In my opinion there are two types of computer users in the world. Intel users
and AMD users. I do not want to talk out of place but it has been my experience that these same categories can also be classified as people who know computers and people that do not.
The vast majority of Intel users are people who do not know that much about their system. Chances are they bought their system from a high street chain store or a larger place like PC World and they went with whatever the salesman ( a spotty, uneducated trainee who actually knows jack about computers whatsoever ) told them was the most popular system or the best system at the moment.
This of course has nothing to do whatsoever with the system being their most expensive product and he will get a sales fee for flogging the AMD 1000+ computer.
The AMD user however is quite different. They fall into many categories including the gamer, the designer, the programmer etc. What sets the typical AMD user aside from the typical Intel user however is that a fairly high percentage of AMD users build their own systems and would never pay the over inflated prices that computer store chains charge?
The AMD Athlon XP 2200+ processor has a performance enhancing cache memory feature of 64K instruction and 64K data cache for a total of 128K L1 cache. 256K of integrated, on chip L2 cache for a total of 384K full speed, on chip cache. Its socket an infrastructure designs are based on high performance platforms and are supported by a full line of optimized infrastructure solutions (chipsets, motherboards, BIOS).
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 February 2009 )
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