it pisses me off.
I haven't bought a new computer for years, and my old system died, so I finally ordered a new system with an i7 7700K about ten days ago, and then last week suddenly this gets big splashy news -- a cheaper chip by AMD that benchmarks better than the one I just ordered.If I had sat on my butt and procrastinated like normal, I probably would have gone with the AMD.... but I thought I was finally doing something good by getting off my butt, lol.
An AMD that performs like an i7 7700k? It probably needs liquid nitrogen canisters attached to it to prevent the atmosphere around it from combusting.
Well, if the 7700K is good enough for Coggy and the forces of transhumanism, I guess it is good enough for me....
I did not buy a high-end gaming system (where I equate that kind of system to a pricetag of $3000-5000, of which they had product lines running that high).
And the lower-end system I specced and bought didn't quite need that level of cooling, but wow, yeah, I saw they had cooling systems for the higher end stuff that was essentially its own complex subsystem of the computer, sometimes using liquid coolant.
This has come a far way from when my 286 had a dinky fan on the back and a very minor heatsink on the CPU if at all. (I can't even remember anymore, it was 25 years ago.)
The old days of 286 you had one little case fan. I remember when I was replacing my CPU with a Pentium 3 450MHz I'd acquired, and we were amazed that they'd put a fan directly on the CPU to make it cooler. Now I have this huge dual fan thing that looks like a fridge element in it.
You can see the difference between where I live and the US. Here, my circles consider my set up to be "ridiculously overspec'd." I have a 4670k, with an overclocked 960 (that hits about 1340MHz). I'm the only one who actually has a gaming keyboard - they all consider it a complete waste of money.
A system built around a 7700k would be considered unobtainable by our standards.
£1k is considered high end. I think mine added up to about £800 of equipment when I got it (including all peripherals). About £750 is considered a decent gaming system, £500 otherwise. I'm known to tell people now not to buy those entry level Celeron based systems as you might as well just get a tablet, but they just buy whatever is cheaper.
Cognisant said:and not having an apple
Rixus said:A system built around a 7700k would be considered unobtainable by our standards.
£1k is considered high end.
i7 7700K, nice.
Getting depressed about tech updates is something one should get over soon. If it's on the shelves its already obsolete.
I think that over 2k USD (excluding monitor) is insanity for showoffs or people that think a couple of fps will make them better...