INTEL
so far in the workstation environment? We know what
the situation is with our synthetic benchmarks, and
for gaming, but what about the real-world tests? What
about situations that really matter? Gaming is great
and all, but it’s in the 3D workshops, the VR
laboratories, the photomanipulation bunkers and the
video-editing powerhouses that these processors are
truly designed to shine.
This all caused something of an argument in the
office. So, to stop the squabble, we got a hold of
ourselves and decided to settle the debate. A build-off,
to the death. One side Intel, one side AMD. No budget
constraints, no fluff, just a pure, fair, and balanced
battle between processor, chipset, and GPU type, to
decide, once and for all, which platform is the better
workstation standard.
So, then, the rules: Storage would be the same for
each system, but we’d have free rein over the choice of
processor, memory, motherboard, GPU, and cooling
- and, of course, we’d have full access to any system
and OS tinkering we wanted, including overclocking
and memory frequency. With both builds completed,
it was time to benchmark the mighty beasts to settle
the quarrel, and put an end to the bickering.
INTEL
BUILD IT!
Step-by-step guide
Pg. 60
PART Street PRICE
Case Raijintek Asterion Plus £140
Motherboard Asus X99-E-10G WS £500
CPU Intel Core i7-6950X £1,630
Memory G.Skill Trident Z 64GB (4x 16GB)
DDR4-3200 £900
GPU Zotac GeForce GTX 1080 Ti 11GB
Founder’s Edition £750
PSU EVGA SuperNova T2 1,600W 80+ Titanium £440
Storage 1 Samsung 960 Pro 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD £276
Storage 2 Western Digital Black 2TB 7,200rpm HDD £102
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 CPU heatsink £83
OS Windows 10 Home 64-bit OEM £80
To t al £ 2 , 4 6 6
INTEL INGREDIENTS
Feature
AMD vs.INTEL