- Apr 24, 2001
- 5,987
- 481
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Hi folks,
I came across an interesting phenomenon, and I'd like to share this with you. I figured I might get further anecdotal confirmation from some of you - perhaps your experiences are completely different! - but it's an interesting discussion nonetheless.
In any case... some of you know that in the past I've been involved in a charitable activity to refurbish older computers and send them to Eastern Europe. Although I'm no longer involved directly in this project, I still like to repair older machines and give them away... And I've recently come to think that AMD-based machines have a shorter lifespan than their Intel counterparts.
Before you accuse me of fanboyism, consider that my top-of-the-line gaming system is an hexacore AMD; and over the years, I consistently supported the AMD/ATI underdogs against the Intel/nVidia onslaught. But my hands-on experience seems to indicate that long-term reliability is higher on Chipzilla's side.
Consider two examples:
1) Back in 2004, I built two separate machines - one around an AthlonXP 2500, the other one around a 2.4 GHz Intel P4. They were put together using some of the best parts recommended here on AT and on other forums... They saw equal amounts of work... and yet, the AMD motherboard (Abit NFS-7) died an ugly death back in 2007, forcing me to retire the whole system. Meanwhile, the P4 still works to this day.
2) Last year, I gave an Athlon XP/nForce2 Gateway machine to an older couple (who uses it for basic web browsing and light office work)... The machine died two weeks ago, after a power blackout, and refused to come back to life. I told the couple to buy a UPS - which they did! - and I replaced the dead computer with a similar one (only this time a HP). Guess what? It also died a week later - I couldn't even figure out why!
This got me thinking... If I add up the amount of times I've seen AMD-based systems kick the bucket, versus Intel, the numbers are much higher than expected. It could be that AMD was sabotaged by its partners (IMHO, the nForce motherboards, albeit popular, had an disproportionately high number of failures, on both AthlonXP and Athlon64 architectures)... But at this point, I'm kinda leaning towards thinking that - enthusiasm aside - AMD machines offset their relative price advantage with shorter lifespans.
Anyone care to comment?
I came across an interesting phenomenon, and I'd like to share this with you. I figured I might get further anecdotal confirmation from some of you - perhaps your experiences are completely different! - but it's an interesting discussion nonetheless.
In any case... some of you know that in the past I've been involved in a charitable activity to refurbish older computers and send them to Eastern Europe. Although I'm no longer involved directly in this project, I still like to repair older machines and give them away... And I've recently come to think that AMD-based machines have a shorter lifespan than their Intel counterparts.
Before you accuse me of fanboyism, consider that my top-of-the-line gaming system is an hexacore AMD; and over the years, I consistently supported the AMD/ATI underdogs against the Intel/nVidia onslaught. But my hands-on experience seems to indicate that long-term reliability is higher on Chipzilla's side.
Consider two examples:
1) Back in 2004, I built two separate machines - one around an AthlonXP 2500, the other one around a 2.4 GHz Intel P4. They were put together using some of the best parts recommended here on AT and on other forums... They saw equal amounts of work... and yet, the AMD motherboard (Abit NFS-7) died an ugly death back in 2007, forcing me to retire the whole system. Meanwhile, the P4 still works to this day.
2) Last year, I gave an Athlon XP/nForce2 Gateway machine to an older couple (who uses it for basic web browsing and light office work)... The machine died two weeks ago, after a power blackout, and refused to come back to life. I told the couple to buy a UPS - which they did! - and I replaced the dead computer with a similar one (only this time a HP). Guess what? It also died a week later - I couldn't even figure out why!
This got me thinking... If I add up the amount of times I've seen AMD-based systems kick the bucket, versus Intel, the numbers are much higher than expected. It could be that AMD was sabotaged by its partners (IMHO, the nForce motherboards, albeit popular, had an disproportionately high number of failures, on both AthlonXP and Athlon64 architectures)... But at this point, I'm kinda leaning towards thinking that - enthusiasm aside - AMD machines offset their relative price advantage with shorter lifespans.
Anyone care to comment?