Uhh, you can get an OEM socket 939 Athlon 64 X2 4200+ for as cheap as $70 on Newegg. There are still options for socket 939, they're just old options. They might not really compete with Core 2's, but if you don't want to switch out your entire motherboard, there are decent X2 socket 939 processors for mostly cheap prices.
It's not a matter of cost I suppose. (I already have one X2 4800 and one X2 4400)
It's a matter of principle: AMD made a tactical choice of going AM2 due to a number benefits. However it was a strategic blunder in the sense that:
1. The AM2 upgrade was only marginally superior to existing 939 performance 2. It was significantly inferior to Core 2 Duo. 3. AMD showed it was fickle enough to abandon a whole socket with not so much as a single phase-out series of CPUs (The opposite of say... the concept of AGP port video cards that were phased out gradually over several years, with PCI-E being gradually phased in).
It made a lot of the AMD user base feeling unstable and mistrustful of investing time/money in the next socket as it may be replaced wholesale seemingly overnight.
While people still held AMD processors in high regard, Socket 939s cancelation left a very bad "feeling of uncertainty" and lacking confidence towards AMDs policy. The tide shifted back to "Old reliable Intel" over "hotshot AMD" some time late last year.
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I am still bitter about the premature cancelation of socket 939. That alone turned me off AMD for a good long while.
Tell me about it. I want to upgrade my 3500+ single core to an X2 and I'm flat out of options because my mainboard uses 939.
If I change the mainboard I have to change the RAM too and I don't have the cash to change all 3 at once.
Uhh, you can get an OEM socket 939 Athlon 64 X2 4200+ for as cheap as $70 on Newegg. There are still options for socket 939, they're just old options. They might not really compete with Core 2's, but if you don't want to switch out your entire motherboard, there are decent X2 socket 939 processors for mostly cheap prices.
Yup. There it is.
AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ Toledo 2.2GHz
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103053
$69.99
Free 3 Business Day Shipping
Throw in a good video card (7600GT, for example) and you'll still have a sweet gaming system.
heck, spend the $80 and upgrade your board to a socket AM2 then you have a host of choices for years to come.
It's not a matter of cost I suppose. (I already have one X2 4800 and one X2 4400)
It's a matter of principle: AMD made a tactical choice of going AM2 due to a number benefits. However it was a strategic blunder in the sense that:
1. The AM2 upgrade was only marginally superior to existing 939 performance
2. It was significantly inferior to Core 2 Duo.
3. AMD showed it was fickle enough to abandon a whole socket with not so much as a single phase-out series of CPUs (The opposite of say... the concept of AGP port video cards that were phased out gradually over several years, with PCI-E being gradually phased in).
It made a lot of the AMD user base feeling unstable and mistrustful of investing time/money in the next socket as it may be replaced wholesale seemingly overnight.
While people still held AMD processors in high regard, Socket 939s cancelation left a very bad "feeling of uncertainty" and lacking confidence towards AMDs policy. The tide shifted back to "Old reliable Intel" over "hotshot AMD" some time late last year.