Not to uh...keep the argument going or anything, but this discussion (along with some recently available hot deals on CPUs) sparked my curiosity, and I've been looking at upgrading my system. I had basically settled on two options:
1. Buy an AM3 Phenom II CPU, and expensive AM3 mainboard, and DDR3 memory.
2. Buy and AM2+ Phenom II and a reasonably priced AM2+ board, and probably get some inexpensive but faster DDR2 1066 RAM.
I didn't like option 1 because it was expensive, and option 2 seemed a bit stupid because I would be buying technology that is about to be made obsolete. But while I was looking for updated mainboard drivers for my system board (an original AM2, not AM2+ board, the Gigabyte GA-MA69G-S3H) I stumbled across the CPU support page:
It turns out that my mainboard will actually support AM3 Phenom II CPUs even though it is only an AM2 board. Thanks to the dual memory controllers in the AM3 CPUs (DDR2 and DDR3) I should be able to get it work with only a BIOS flash. Granted, the CPU will still be limited to HT 1.0 speeds, but going from an X2 5600+ to a Phenom II X4 925 will give a nice boost with the added cache, cores, and IPC improvements.
That's one more benefit the AM2 platform has. I can get the AM3 CPU for a boost today, and then 6-12 months from now when AM3 boards and DDR3 memory are plentiful and cheap I can swap those parts out for yet another speed boost. I just cut another $200 off of my Phenom II upgrade.
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