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10 year cpu challenge

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Reply 40 of 172, by oohms

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In 2009 i had a C2Q 9550.. it was the last cpu i owned in a frenzy of upgrades spanning 2005-2009, where i upgraded enough that the old parts had yet to become dusty.

Since then I only upgraded once to an i7 2600K, which serves me well right to this day (even for gaming)

DOS/w3.11/w98 | K6-III+ 400ATZ @ 550 | FIC PA2013 | 128mb SDram | Voodoo 3 3000 | Avancelogic ALS100 | Roland SC-55ST
DOS/w98/XP | Core 2 Duo E4600 | Asus P5PE-VM | 512mb DDR400 | Ti4800SE | ForteMedia FM801

Reply 42 of 172, by tayyare

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2009: Core 2 Quad Q9550
2019: Xeon X5470 (still on the same board - Asus P5Q Premium, upgraded less than a year ago, after a short episode with E5450)

GA-6VTXE PIII 1.4+512MB
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Reply 43 of 172, by Imperious

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2009 Pentium Dual core E5200 @ 3400mhz
2019 AMD Ryzen 2600 @ stock

From 2010 till 2018 i5-750@4ghz, then xeon X3450 @3.6ghz (not a good overclocker)

The Ryzen is easily twice as powerful as the i5 and xeon and considering I could run all the latest games fine with the i5 and GTX1070
really didn't see the point of spending twice the $$$ on a more powerful cpu. 7nm Ryzen might be a worthy upgrade later this year though.

Atari 2600, TI994a, Vic20, c64, ZX Spectrum 128, Amstrad CPC464, Atari 65XE, Commodore Plus/4, Amiga 500
PC's from XT 8088, 486, Pentium MMX, K6, Athlon, P3, P4, 775, to current Ryzen 5600x.

Reply 44 of 172, by appiah4

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Overclocking that 2600 to near 4GHz will give you half the boost you would get from a 7nm Ryzen upgrade. 😎

Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.

Reply 45 of 172, by Almoststew1990

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In January 2009 I think I had my first PC I bought with my own money. It would have been a very new i7 860 / 8GB DDR3 2133MHz / ATI 4890. I've upgraded the motherboard and CPU once to a 4770k build. I kept the Ram but upgraded the GPU a fair few times ( 7870, 7970, 390x, 1070ti)

I was very pleased with my i7 860. Very glad I got it over the i5. I wonder how it would hold up today.

Edit - I must have got the i7 860 set up the year after, so in 2009 I had an amd Athlon 5200+ 3GB DDR2 and an 8600GT. Definitely an upgrade to the i7 860

Ryzen 3700X | 16GB 3600MHz RAM | AMD 6800XT | 2Tb NVME SSD | Windows 10
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I have a vacancy for a main Windows 98 PC

Reply 46 of 172, by petro89

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Then: Q6600, hd4870, 4gb ddr2 800

Now: Ryzen 7 2700x, GTX1080, 16gb ddr4 3200

Last edited by petro89 on 2019-01-21, 14:05. Edited 1 time in total.

*Ryzen 9 3900xt, 5700xt, Win10
*Ryzen 7 2700x, Gtx1080, Win10
*FX 9590, Vega64, Win10
*Phenom IIx6 1100T, R9 380, Win7
*QX9770, r9 270x, Win7
*FX60, hd5850, Win7
*XP2400+, ti4600, Win2k
*PPro 200 1mb, banshee, w98
*AMD 5x86, CL , DOS

Reply 48 of 172, by petro89

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Really don’t need to as the 2700x is an absolute beast, but hey, YOLO right!? 😊

*Ryzen 9 3900xt, 5700xt, Win10
*Ryzen 7 2700x, Gtx1080, Win10
*FX 9590, Vega64, Win10
*Phenom IIx6 1100T, R9 380, Win7
*QX9770, r9 270x, Win7
*FX60, hd5850, Win7
*XP2400+, ti4600, Win2k
*PPro 200 1mb, banshee, w98
*AMD 5x86, CL , DOS

Reply 49 of 172, by Silanda

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10 Years ago: Core 2 Quad Q6600
Now: i5 3570k overclocked to 4.4Ghz which I've been running for nearly six years.

Waiting for a compelling reason to upgrade again. The Ryzen 3000 series looks interesting.

Reply 52 of 172, by Ozzuneoj

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2009: Core 2 Quad Q9550 ... Sold in 2011 and actually broke even when upgrading to...
2019: Core i5 2500K... usually have it running at 4.2Ghz on a Thermalright Ultra 120 Extreme (had that since 2007)

Not sure which was a better buy... The 2500k that has lasted me 8 years or the Q9550 that was still so valuable in 2011 that it allowed me to upgrade to one of the best CPUs of all time for free.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 53 of 172, by SW-SSG

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SpectriaForce wrote:

Can somebody explain me what the rationale behind this topic is?

I can write down what I used to have and now have, but I don’t see the point. It’s probably going to make some of you jealous while some might not be impressed at all.

I saw it as just a fun "let's see how our old CPUs compare to our current ones" type thing, not really as showing off or judging. Might also be interesting to see how many people are still running their "old" platforms, too (LGA775 and AM3 look really long-lived, for example).

Reply 54 of 172, by PTherapist

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SpectriaForce wrote:

Can somebody explain me what the rationale behind this topic is?

I can write down what I used to have and now have, but I don’t see the point. It’s probably going to make some of you jealous while some might not be impressed at all.

For me personally, the most fun posts in this topic are those that have specs from periods going back to 1999 & 1989 etc. It's interesting to see the massive leaps in computer specs from the 1980s up to 2009.

For me, whilst the CPUs in 2019 are definitely faster than back in 2009, 2009 systems in general are still very usable as modern PCs. So it doesn't feel like much of an evolution in specs in that time period. Going back to 2009 however and 1999 systems were already much too slow for modern usage by then. 1999 is an even better example, you wouldn't want to be using a PC from 1989 to do anything modern in 1999! 🤣

Reply 55 of 172, by powershoes

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2009: Core 2 Duo E6750
2019: Core 2 Quad Q9550

Same Asus P5K-VM motherboard and case. Just upgraded components along the way. I don't have any practical reason to build something new.

Reply 57 of 172, by LHN91

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Edit: 1999: The family had a Pentium MMX 233, and I believe I still had an IBM PS/2 Model 55SX for myself, which was a 386sx/16

Early 2009: 1.8 GHz Pentium 4, either an early Northwood or a late Willamette

Late 2009: Athlon X4 620 - this was my last "new" CPU. Since then it's been a collection of reclaimed hardware from various sources

2019: i5-2500 - this is a purchase from a recycler placed into an Acer OEM board pulled from a dumpster. I've upgraded most of the surrounding components but for 1080p gaming it's still really solid.

Reply 58 of 172, by Ozzuneoj

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PTherapist wrote:

For me personally, the most fun posts in this topic are those that have specs from periods going back to 1999 & 1989 etc. It's interesting to see the massive leaps in computer specs from the 1980s up to 2009.

I hadn't thought of it this way before! Thankfully, my first PC (that was personally mine) was purchased in 1999, so it fits well. I'm going to repost. 😁

1989: MOS 6502 1.02Mhz... Pretty sure we had a VIC-20 when I was three years old, so, why not list that? 🤣
1999: Pentium II 400Mhz ... In a Gateway G6-400 which is still right under my desk and works perfectly.
*Followed by: Athlon Slot A 750Mhz, Athlon Thunderbird 1.33Ghz, Athlon XP 1800+ Palamino, Athlon XP 1700+ Thoroughbred B (still have this at 2Ghz), Athlon 64 3000+ S939 (still have), Athlon 64 X2 4200+ (still have), Core 2 Duo E6750 and...
2009: Core 2 Quad Q9550 ... Sold in 2011 and actually broke even when upgrading to...
2019: Core i5 2500K... Been running it at least at 4.2Ghz on a Thermalright Ultra 120 Extreme since spring of 2011.

Funny thing is my TRUE120 CPU cooler was originally used on the E6750 in 2007-2008. It was given to me by an online acquaintance because it was too tall for his case. What a score! It has lasted me almost 12 years! I intend to buy a mounting kit to make it work on my next system assuming one exists. Can you imagine keeping any other CPU cooler for 12 years?

Imagine trying to use one of these from the early to mid 90s to cool a P4 Prescott:

41AZC4UguKL._SX425_.jpg

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 59 of 172, by clueless1

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2009: Core2Duo E4300
2019: i5-4590

The more I learn, the more I realize how much I don't know.
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