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Thread Status: Active Total posts in this thread: 36
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nanoprobe
Master Cruncher Classified Joined: Aug 29, 2008 Post Count: 2998 Status: Offline Project Badges:
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B21. PM me at the team website.
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In 1969 I took an oath to defend and protect the U S Constitution against all enemies, both foreign and Domestic. There was no expiration date.
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ryan222h
Senior Cruncher Joined: Sep 4, 2006 Post Count: 425 Status: Offline |
If you're interested in what AMD has to offer, you can look at this:
----------------------------------------Motherboard: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131643 CPU(s): http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?It...344&IsVirtualParent=1 I used to have this exact motherboard and had no issues with it at all. The CPU's are latest gen 12 core models but you can get the magny-cours 12 core cpu's used off of Ebay for much less. 24 cores for $1250 (cpu and mobo) then add some ram and a power supply (make sure PSU has 2 8 pin cpu power connectors on it). ![]() [Edit 2 times, last edit by ryan222h at Jul 16, 2013 4:29:09 PM] |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
I wonder if these Dual-CPU setups are really the best choice? Sure, 12 or 16 cores are faster than 4 cores, but much more expensive also.
If I want to maximize my WCG Points in comparison to overall cost (Hardware + electricity cost), whats best? A bunch of consumer PCs or one multiprocessor setup? As far as I see, Multiprocessor systems cost more per computing power and energy efficiency is comparable to high end consumer processors (if you compare core count, clock and TDP). Or is there anything I miss? |
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Jack007
Master Cruncher CANADA Joined: Feb 25, 2005 Post Count: 1604 Status: Offline Project Badges:
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Pandelta, I just promised my wife no more upgrades and LOOK WHAT YOU POINT OUT! "Ivy Bridge E5-2600v2 based 8/16, 10/20 and 12/24 core processors" Now I have to research... Nah, this would be better.... http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Haswell-X-Xeon-EP-Intel,23477.html wow, that one chip more cores than my 3 machines... ![]() |
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ryan222h
Senior Cruncher Joined: Sep 4, 2006 Post Count: 425 Status: Offline |
I wonder if these Dual-CPU setups are really the best choice? Sure, 12 or 16 cores are faster than 4 cores, but much more expensive also. If I want to maximize my WCG Points in comparison to overall cost (Hardware + electricity cost), whats best? A bunch of consumer PCs or one multiprocessor setup? As far as I see, Multiprocessor systems cost more per computing power and energy efficiency is comparable to high end consumer processors (if you compare core count, clock and TDP). Or is there anything I miss? They're not necessarily a better choice, but they allow you to do more work per machine. It's personal preference. I love seeing 24 tasks going at once on one monitor though! ![]() |
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Bearcat
Master Cruncher USA Joined: Jan 6, 2007 Post Count: 2803 Status: Offline Project Badges:
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I wonder if these Dual-CPU setups are really the best choice? Sure, 12 or 16 cores are faster than 4 cores, but much more expensive also. If I want to maximize my WCG Points in comparison to overall cost (Hardware + electricity cost), whats best? A bunch of consumer PCs or one multiprocessor setup? As far as I see, Multiprocessor systems cost more per computing power and energy efficiency is comparable to high end consumer processors (if you compare core count, clock and TDP). Or is there anything I miss? They're not necessarily a better choice, but they allow you to do more work per machine. It's personal preference. I love seeing 24 tasks going at once on one monitor though! Ditto. ![]()
Crunching for humanity since 2007!
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