jett said:Is there any point in getting a 2600k over a 2500k for gaming purposes? Is there any purpose at all for it?![]()
Sethos said:Nope.
Soi-Fong said:Really? No difference between the i7 and i5?
ACE 1991 said:Given this build: http://pcpartpicker.com/p/Rla
What motherboard from Microcenter would I need to ensure it's compatible with the rest of my rig? That i5 2500K deal sounds amazing, but I want to make sure I'm not messing up the build I currently have. I'm leaving in less than 24 hours to go back to school and won't be near a microcenter, so if someone could give me some input on this soon I, and my small bank account, would greatly appreciate it! I can order the other parts online and have it shipped to school.
what boards are they offering?ACE 1991 said:Bumping due to time sensitivity. Sorry for being that guy.
Sethos said:Not for gaming purposes really. The advantage starts to become obvious if you do a lot of 3D / Video rendering, stuff like that.
Sethos said:Not for gaming purposes really. The advantage starts to become obvious if you do a lot of 3D / Video rendering, stuff like that.
tehbible said:you sure about that? i dont think its exactly that black and white
LordCanti said:I can't find anything mentioning the deal on their site. I added a Z68 mobo (the second most expensive Gigabyte one, for like $160) and a 2500k. In the cart, the mobo is $119 (before a $15 rebate).
I should mention that this is in store pickup only. Don't want to get the hopes up of anyone without a local Microcenter.
ACE 1991 said:Does this deal only apply to the most expensive mobo's? Can I get one within the $100-110 range for cheaper as a combo with the i5 2500K?
ACE 1991 said:Does this deal only apply to the most expensive mobo's? Can I get one within the $100-110 range for cheaper as a combo with the i5 2500K?
ACE 1991 said:Bumping due to time sensitivity. Sorry for being that guy.
hah. guess not.Sethos said:You really think this difference is worth the extra cost, gaming wise?
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4083/...core-i7-2600k-i5-2500k-core-i3-2100-tested/20
if cost is worrying you, i'd just go for the P67. cheaper, without any hindrance in performance.ACE 1991 said:Does this deal only apply to the most expensive mobo's? Can I get one within the $100-110 range for cheaper as a combo with the i5 2500K?
Sethos said:You really think this difference is worth the extra cost, gaming wise?
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4083/...core-i7-2600k-i5-2500k-core-i3-2100-tested/20
jett said:Is there any point in getting a 2600k over a 2500k for gaming purposes? Is there any purpose at all for it?![]()
Okay, thanks! So, to clarify, any of the Z68 models and P67 models will be compatible with my build?LordCanti said:No idea. Add one to cart (with a 2500k) to find out.
Get a P67 or Z68 mobo. No real difference between the two, unless you want the integrated video to work (Z68), or you want SSD caching (which takes a small SSD, and uses it to cache OS files).
Look for ATX and not Micro ATX.
yes. DON'T BUY LGA1156 motherboards. thats for first gen i7.ACE 1991 said:Okay, thanks! So, to clarify, any of the Z68 models and P67 models will be compatible with my build?
sn1pes said:Can someone tell me the difference between these 2 boards?
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?sku=603563
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?sku=603373
Which is better for a 2500K? Both are good for overclocking, right?
jett said:Okay so I'm looking at getting an ASUS P67 motherboard, but they have like 10 different models, any recommendations in the sub $150 price range?. I'm not looking for anything fancy, I intend to pair it to a 2500k for the potential of overclocking it if needed. The PC will most likely only be a single-GPU one.
MisterNoisy said:Biggest one is that the Extreme4 has more than one PCI-E x16 slot (and supports SLI and XFire).
Drazgul said:Any particular reason for the P67? The Z68's will do all of that and more; Asrock's Pro3 is a great board:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157251
LordCanti said:WTF. Apparently Microcenter IS having a $40 combo deal for 2500k's and compatible mobo's right now. They didn't e-mail me about it. I feel so unloved.
jett said:What does a Z68 do over a P67?
do you prefer ATX or micro ATX?jett said:Okay so I'm looking at getting an ASUS P67 motherboard, but they have like 10 different models, any recommendations in the sub $150 price range?. I'm not looking for anything fancy, I intend to pair it to a 2500k for the potential of overclocking it if needed. The PC will most likely only be a single-GPU one.
iirc, i remember there was a hack to put dx 11 on xp machines.PhoenixDark said:I just bought a Radeon 5770. I have Windows XP, meaning I'm restricted to directX 9.0. I'm wondering whether I'll see the actual power of the card when I switch to Windows 7, which has directX 11.0? For instance I play SC2, which looked great on my old graphics card (3870) but I noticed WoW still looks very meh. The graphics options say I need a card that supports shaders and some other things, including high resolution water effects.
I know the 5770 has to support those updated shaders. So I'll have access to those effects once I get Windows 7 correct?
sn1pes said:Yea, and it has more 6gb/s SATA, and some other stuff.
I think I'm gonna go with that one. Any other thoughts on it?
Link for reference http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0367878
mkenyon said:Now, I wouldn't normally recommend something like the RoG series to regular system builders or gamers. But, with the tiny price increase on the Gene-Z over regular Z68, its the only 1155 board I'd personally consider buying.
tehbible said:iirc, i remember there was a hack to put dx 11 on xp machines.
mkenyon said:Comparing an ASRock board to an RoG board is like a Kia to BMW. When i was talking about the price difference, I meant as in ASUS Z68 compared to the ASUS Gene-Z, its a $30-$40 difference. There's still a significant price difference here between the baseline ASRock boards though.
Listen to this man.mkenyon said:Now, I wouldn't normally recommend something like the RoG series to regular system builders or gamers. But, with the tiny price increase on the Gene-Z over regular Z68, its the only 1155 board I'd personally consider buying. The price is stupid good for what you get out of it. RoG connect alone is worth the price increase, there's nothing that makes OCing as easy.
http://hw-lab.com/uploads/pr/asus/mb/lga1155/m4gene-z-1_750.jpg
mkenyon said:Now, I wouldn't normally recommend something like the RoG series to regular system builders or gamers.
mkenyon said:Now, I wouldn't normally recommend something like the RoG series to regular system builders or gamers. But, with the tiny price increase on the Gene-Z over regular Z68, its the only 1155 board I'd personally consider buying. The price is stupid good for what you get out of it. RoG connect alone is worth the price increase, there's nothing that makes OCing as easy.
http://hw-lab.com/uploads/pr/asus/mb/lga1155/m4gene-z-1_750.jpg
Use the money you would on a 965 on a AM3+ mobo instead (you can put your Phenom II X4 in a AM3+ mobo, they're backwards compatible). Then, when Bulldozer comes out, it'll be a drop-in upgrade to octo-core wonderland. You won't see huge gains between a 805 and a 965, aside from a few games like SCII where you need super speedy cores. Even then, you'd need to upgrade your 965 to 4.0Ghz territory to see that benefit.btcollide said:Returned a Diamond 6950 2GB at Fry's today and am just going to order a different one off Newegg or Amazon for cheaper when I do my research. Would it be wise to consider a GTX 560Ti instead to save a couple of bucks?
Reason I'm leaning towards a GTX 560 Ti is I'd save a little bit more money and COULD offset the other money for a Phenom II X4 965 upgrade (I currently run a Phenom II X4 805). I think my processor was a bottleneck when I had the 6950 running. I could easily go to Microcenter and pick up a 965 with a free MB for $119 + tax. I would have considered a GTX 570 but I think my processor will be a big enough bottleneck to prevent me from getting max. performance it's capable of.
This new videocard WILL transfer to a new build eventually (Whether it will be Bulldozer or new Intel chips remains to be seen). Any input would be great..
tehbible said:do you prefer ATX or micro ATX?
i just saw this on newegg, evga p67 mATX board. looks awesome.
i like the build quality of evga's mobos. and they have an awesome return policy.
Expansion slots.jett said:I don't know really, what difference does a smaller or bigger board make?
mkenyon said:Use the money you would on a 965 on a AM3+ mobo instead (you can put your Phenom II X4 in a AM3+ mobo, they're backwards compatible). Then, when Bulldozer comes out, it'll be a drop-in upgrade to octo-core wonderland. You won't see huge gains between a 805 and a 965, aside from a few games like SCII where you need super speedy cores. Even then, you'd need to upgrade your 965 to 4.0Ghz territory to see that benefit.
Uninstall your previous drivers through device manager. Then turn off your computer. Pull out the old card, put in the new one. Make sure it's plugged in to power as well. Turn it back on, install new drivers. Done!Darklord said:Got my new 570. Anything I need to know before installing it? This is the first time I'm installing a card.