Sapphiron
Honorary Master
It seems that you realise that you're wrong, but are just too stubborn to admit it! Did you misread what killadoob wrote? The E2140 (bottom of the range) + any decent mobo (overclocking ability) = faster than AMD's top of the range CPU plus whatever mobo you care to stick with it.
And then, with that same mobo, you can go and buy yourself a Q600, and seriously wip the AMD, or, if you win the lottery, the QX9650!
Unless you're a serious fanboy (which it seems you are) there is no viable reason to buy AMD for your PC!
IMO...
Hey, I'm no fanboy. I own a Q6600. at 3Ghz overclock it owns yes, but I hate the fact that I need a R1700 700W power supply to run it with my 8800 and The motherboard chipset (NF 680i) puts out more heat than a Entry level CPU.
I still believe that for cheap stuff, AMD still has the better platform. Performance is not only CPU speed, but also other components.
The boards ARE cheaper when you compare equivalent features. Yes you can get a R600 Intel board, but then you get 2 ram slots, 2 sata's, 100mbit network and only 18 PCI-E lanes on the motherboard. With the AMD for R600, you get 4 ram slots, 4 sata's, HDMI, gigabit Lan (200mbit PCI based Gigabit is not gigabit), RAID and no onboard DVI
Lets compare ASUS boards (since they are popular and have a wide range of boards for both brands)
Entry level (less than R700 retail):
ASUS M2N-VM HDMI - R700
http://www.asus.com.tw/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=101&l3=496&l4=0&model=1585&modelmenu=1
vs
ASUS P5L-MX - R700
http://www.asus.com.tw/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=11&l3=194&model=1320&modelmenu=1
with the P5L you LOOSE the following:
PCI-E based Gigabit LAN
Onboard graphics capable of playing the odd game of Sims or WOW.
Onboard DVI - big bonus for those with LCD's
2 ram slots.
RAID
Firewire
Optical Out Audio
HDMI
TV-out
Quad Core capability
Midrange (less than R1400):
ASUS M3A - R980
ASUS P5K - R1490
http://www.asus.com.tw/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=11&l3=534&l4=0&model=1637&modelmenu=1
The boards are very equal in features, with the P5K leading slightly thanks to it's esata, but the M3A has a faster PCI-E v2 slot so it's has better upgradability in term of graphics and has RAID on it's internal ports (unlike the external only on the P5K).
The biggest problem is the P5K is 50% more expensive than the M3A. plus if you upgrade in 2009 or even late in 2008, you will need to replace your baord and ram, as Intel's P35 chipset will be useless with the new processors by then.
High end: (no price limit without going berserk)
MSI K9A Platinum - R2000 (asus does not have M3A32 boards on market yet)
http://global.msi.com.tw/index.php?func=proddesc&prod_no=1332&maincat_no=1&cat2_no=171
ASUS P5E3 - R 3000
http://www.asus.com.tw/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=11&l3=572&l4=0&model=1873&modelmenu=1
Although the P5E3 uses the 3-5% faster DDR3 ram, the ram is 200% more expensive. The boards are otherwise evenly matched in terms of the important specifications. They why is the P5E R1000 more expensive and use more power? a R1000 is the difference between a dual 1.6 CPU and a Quad 2.4Ghz CPU, or a 500GB hard drive.
Obviously the above is not the start and end of the discussion, but the above boards are a reasonable indication I believe. Quite a different picture from 5 months ago, when AMD did not have their newest chipsets out.