On Wednesday 09 Sep 2015 19:01:24 Stefan G. Weichinger wrote: > Am 2015-09-09 um 04:20 schrieb James: > > I have posted several links on the subject previously [1]; here's one > > [2]. > > [..] > > > If you can afford it, get a mobo that supports DDR-4. > > Right now the AMD-HBM Fury-X is the video card with the > > highest bandwidth for a memory buss on a video card, if > > you can find one for sale:: limited production right now. > > > > RDMA Remote Dynamic Memory Access is the principal finally available > > in gcc.... > > Thanks for the pointers, I will read through that thread soon. > So this means chosing CPU *and* GPU accordingly :-) > > I didn't plan to buy a separate video card at all as my usage is quite > office/terminal-style without gaming or video stuff. The integrated > graphics of modern core-i7xxx should be enough to run my 2 > 24-inch-monitors. But if the GPU helps speeding up things ... I have to > consider this as well. > > Digging up that thread now somewhere ... > > Stefan
I built last Christmas a Kaveri APU based PC, with two 23" monitors and no external GPU. This is a PC used as a workstation for coding, image processing and the odd video transcoding. No gaming. Using stable radeon driver. The performance of this machine has really impressed me when compiling packages, but I don't have the latest generation i7 to compare it with. Unlike noisy discrete GPUs this thing is really quiet and doesn't consume much power either. The Asus MoBo has a port for an external GPU, but I don't think I will ever bother getting one - certainly not new. ;-) I have been thinking that the better compiling performance compared to my other older PCs can't just be CPU specific, it must be all these additional HSA-enabled compute cores that are doing some of the heavy lifting. I don't know how to check this though. -- Regards, Mick
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