Quoting Craig Sanders ([email protected]):

> that's a 32-bit CPU from Sep 2006, nearly 9 years old. are you aware
> that you can upgrade to a modern machine for under $170?
> 
> e.g. the cheapest current parts combo i can find at MSY today is:
> 
> AMD A4-7300 64-bit dual-core CPU + GPU   $58
> ASRock A58M-HD+ motherboard              $65
> 4G Kit DDR3-1333 RAM (2x2GB)             $46

FWIW, I've been involved in a similar discussion on my LUG mailing list
here on the USA's left coast, and we've been talking about new
high-performance x86_64 motherboard / AMD SoC combos supporting up to
32GB of DDR3 RAM for ridiculously low prices.

And, oddly enough, my leading example of same is a current ASRock mini-ITX
motherboard bundled with a quad-core AMD A4-5000 'Kabini' SoC (aka
'APU').  And some almost-as-good similar boards (with slightly less
powerful SoCs are even fanless.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157574
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157518 
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E1681313536

Intriguing if hardware-limited tiny box (maxes out at 8GB):
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883218035

(Prices will need to be converted to AUG$ from funny-looking green
stuff.)


> also, FYI, the Intel G1840 (a dual-core 64-bit celeron with built-in
> graphics) costs $55 but the cheapest Haswell Refresh motherboards start
> at nearly twice the price of the cheapest AMD FM2+ motherboards....and
> Intel, as usual, sucks at upgradability.

Total agreement.  The 2003 AMD 'Jaguar' (Kabini/Temash) SoCs beat the hell
out of most Celeron/Atom/etc. stuff except the server-grade Atom
variants that are probably way overpriced.  AMD's successor, the 2004
'Puma' (Beema/Mullins) SoCs are intriguing but are very nearly
unobtainium.  And, also, where I find them at all, for some daft reason
I find 8GB RAM ceilings (cf. 32GB) -- which I find odd.

Example (currently out of stock, as they sold like hotcakes) is the
top end of CompuLab's Fitlet range:
http://www.fit-pc.com/web/products/specifications/?model%5B%5D=FITLET-GI-C67-WACB

That uses the quad-core AMD A10-Micro 6700T, which is a 'Mullins' APU.
Other Fitlet variants with less-powerful Mullins SoCs, are still in stock.

AMD's 2015 successor to 'Puma' in the low-mains-draw, high-performance
market, is suppoed to be an architecture callled 'Carrizo-L' , the
low-power variant of the 'Carrizo' x86_64 arch.  Not seen at all.

It's weird that the most compelling low-power, high-RAM, fast hardware
on the market is based on low-budget AMD chips from 2003.  A conspiracy 
theorist might suppose AMD is being strangled out of the market (again).
Or that they cannot get OEM uptake because the OEMs opt for cruddy ARM 
alternatives' bottom-dollar pricing because they assume few customers 
care enough to buy something that doesn't suck.  Or both.

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