Greetings!
I'm about to put together a gaming PC for my son as I am tired of him bitching about lag on his iMac with an i5-4570 3.2GHz (CPUMark ~7k). Yes, it's a Mac, so YMMV. However, the chart of best price vs performance seems to disregard a minimum perf level; and the high-end CPUMark does not provide price/perf.
I'd like to either (a) get access to the raw data (perf and price of CPUs from the high-end CPU chart) and do my own data analysis in Excel; or (b) be able to "rerun" the price/perf charts with filters, such as "min perf level is 10k" and/or "max price is $300".
is there any way to do that? One reason I ask is other benchmarks (such as this one http://www.anandtech.com/bench/CPU/1291 ) show about equivalent performance for the top 24 CPUs--and that's a lot of data, and the more I can narrow it down the better. Yes, some of will have to do with the supported memory technologies and speeds, but I gotta start somewhere.
-normie-
I'm about to put together a gaming PC for my son as I am tired of him bitching about lag on his iMac with an i5-4570 3.2GHz (CPUMark ~7k). Yes, it's a Mac, so YMMV. However, the chart of best price vs performance seems to disregard a minimum perf level; and the high-end CPUMark does not provide price/perf.
I'd like to either (a) get access to the raw data (perf and price of CPUs from the high-end CPU chart) and do my own data analysis in Excel; or (b) be able to "rerun" the price/perf charts with filters, such as "min perf level is 10k" and/or "max price is $300".
is there any way to do that? One reason I ask is other benchmarks (such as this one http://www.anandtech.com/bench/CPU/1291 ) show about equivalent performance for the top 24 CPUs--and that's a lot of data, and the more I can narrow it down the better. Yes, some of will have to do with the supported memory technologies and speeds, but I gotta start somewhere.
-normie-
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