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News AMD launches AM1 Kabini desktop range

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Gareth Halfacree, 9 Apr 2014.

  1. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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  2. SAimNE

    SAimNE What's a Dremel?

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    seems like a good way to make a quick cheap mediapc o.o
     
  3. Jim

    Jim Ineptimodder

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    I had a stab at XBMC on Raspberry Pi, but it was a bit sluggish for my liking, and my old Mini-ITX Intel build was too noisy to work in the long run... this could be what convinces me to have another go - it looks ideal.
     
  4. flibblesan

    flibblesan Destroyer

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    Gigabyte GA-AM1M-S2H mATX is £24.82 (pre-order) and Asus AM1I-A mITX £26.64 at Scan. Great prices. I just hope the APUs themselves are cheap enough.
     
  5. Shirty

    Shirty W*nker! Super Moderator

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    I'm already using an A4-5000 Jaguar SoC in my HTPC. I'm pretty sure it's BGA rather than socketed under the tiny passive heatsink, but I was on the bandwagon a while ago. Great little thing, a "Radeon HD 8330" and what is essentially much the same as a PS4/Xbone processor with a few less cores :p

    It's made a nice fanless rig.
     
  6. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    We can certainly do some guesswork. The AMD A10-6800K APU's official list price per unit in trays of 1,000 is $142; Newegg will currently sell you a retail version for $130. Yes, that's bizarre; nevertheless, that gives us a list-to-retail ratio of 0.92. Converting Newegg's price to Pounds Sterling makes £93.22 including VAT; Ebuyer sells the same chip in retail packaging for £103.58, for a rip-off Britain ratio of 1.11.

    Take the $55 list price for the top-end AM1 Athlon, and times it by the list-to-retail ratio to get an estimated retail price of $50.60. Convert that to the Queen's currency and add the VAT and you get £36.24; times this by the rip-off Britain ratio to get an estimated UK retail price of £40.22.

    *However*, I can see 'ere on this slide a claim of $59 for the top-end Athlon, which I'm assuming is AMD's manufacturer's recommended retail price given that it's $4 higher than the $55 per unit in tray form I've been quoted for AMD direct purchases. *So*, leaving the list-to-retail ratio alone and doing a straightforward currency conversion, VAT and the 11% rip-off Britain addition would give us £42.30.

    In short: expect the top-end chip to sit just north of £40 and I doubt you'll be far wrong. That would put it roughly level with the AMD A6-6400K, or Intel's Pentium G3220.

    TL;DR: I'm procrastinating again.
     
  7. Jim

    Jim Ineptimodder

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    Not a bad guess...

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/AMD-AD5350J...F8&qid=1397052191&sr=8-1&keywords=athlon+5350
     
  8. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    Hah! I did wonder if they'd take a hit and opt for the sub-£40 mark. Considering the cost of the motherboards, that's pretty darn good: add in a stick or two of RAM, small storage drive and a cheapy-cheap PSU and case and you could potentially have a brand-new quad-core system for ~£100.

    EDIT: Updated the article with UK pricing.
     
  9. runadumb

    runadumb What's a Dremel?

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    I'm planning a wee build for my sister and nephew and this could well be perfect! It needs to play minecraft though, BENCHMARK THE MINECRAFTS!
     
  10. jrs77

    jrs77 Modder

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    Grab one of these small cases with 65W PSU+Brick, put OpenELEC on a USB-Stick and you've got yourself a totally silent and damn cheap HTPC.
     
  11. tonyd223

    tonyd223 king of nothing

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    Getting to be a bit of a fan boy here, but the HP Microserver Gen7, after rebate's only £100, includes a processor, motherboard, case, power supply, memory and HDD, and it's quiet. Add a discrete half height HDMI card, you're looking at £130 all in...

    Just saying...
     
  12. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    Far weaker CPU, though, and it ain't silent. Sure, it's not like what I had in the 90s with its 60mm Delta CPU fan, but my Microserver N54L is easily the nosiest thing in the office - far more so than my A10-5800K desktop.
     
  13. tonyd223

    tonyd223 king of nothing

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    Mine is pretty quiet - but then it's new, and I'm only running Freenas... But point taken...
     
  14. AlienwareAndy

    AlienwareAndy What's a Dremel?

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    This is pretty exciting really. I mean, a PC for around £100....

    Let's just hope that there's a nice cheap ITX board and they're not butt rape prices.
     
  15. Harlequin

    Harlequin Modder

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  16. AlienwareAndy

    AlienwareAndy What's a Dremel?

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    Hurrah ! at forking last !!

    Becoming more and more interested in this as the hours pass.

    Ed. Bah it needs a 16x PCIE...
     
  17. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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  18. AlienwareAndy

    AlienwareAndy What's a Dremel?

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    Thinking about it the gambling industry could use that too. Their RNG dongles are usually off board serial or USB devices.
     
  19. Harlequin

    Harlequin Modder

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    what `needs` 16x pcie that's not a gfx card??
     
  20. GeorgeStorm

    GeorgeStorm Aggressive PC Builder

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    Interesting, not quite enough oomph to be suitable for the media PC at home, so I don't regret building that over Christmas.

    Might be nice for low power PCs elsewhere in the house though if the need arises.
     

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