I'm building a new mitx build right now and I havent got a lot of the components other than motherboard (b650), case and psu. I might just hold off buying a cpu right now as the 9600x might be an option for me or the 7600X might go down in price when 9000s come out. I'm happy either way. I think its a great time to go for the ddr5 era amd platform. Exciting times!
Ooo nice, the new build sounds interesting - I've always wanted to try a mITX build :) I think your logic is great - I would definitely hold off for a week or two and see what the 9000 series reviews look like. I recently picked up the 7600 for a NAS build (it was heavily reduced, right before AMD announced they were delaying the 9000 series), it has been a great chip so far. Good luck on your build - both the 9600x and 7600x would be brilliant CPUs for it.
I swear the only tech product that has a naming that makes sense is Playstation. Everything else is an exercise in absurdity. From CPU's to GPU's and don't get me even started on monitors.
Hah yes I agree entirely, lots of naming conventions have gone OTT for sure - it's especially annoying when AMD's CPU and GPU names start to clash (you Google a Ryzen CPU, and the results are for Radeon GPUs!) - or when Intel and AMD's CPUs start get confusingly similar. It's a bit frustrating all round.
Can u explayn please how the rayzen cpu - motherboard relation is. I mean i want to build new pc but ive never used ryzen. Currently using my old. am3+ mb with fx8350 cpu 32gb ram and rx580. But i can barely run any new game even on low settings. So back to the question, when i see am5 motherboards some of them say supporting 7000-8000 ryzen. And some say support only 9000 series Ryzen. What is better to buy ?does going for motherboard with 9000 series support = more longevity of the build or its gonna have better performance than a build using 7000/8000 series , do i have to change mb+cpu in about 1 or 2 years since they obviously release new ryzen series every 12-18 months. ???
Sure - so an AM5 motherboard runs with DDR5 RAM and you'll need the 7000 series onwards. AM5 is the most future proofed option as a result, because it will be supported for many years. However an AM4 motherboard will be a good budget option - it goes up to the 5000 series CPUs, and supports DDR4. This will be a much cheaper option. That's what I have in my workstation PC (a 5900X CPU and 64GB of DDR4 RAM) and it plays all games with minimal issue, especially at 1440p. So it mainly depends on your budget.
Thanks for the feedback. Throughout the video or a specific part? I didn't do anything differently here and the audio syncing looks decent to me, but can check again.
I'm building a new mitx build right now and I havent got a lot of the components other than motherboard (b650), case and psu. I might just hold off buying a cpu right now as the 9600x might be an option for me or the 7600X might go down in price when 9000s come out. I'm happy either way. I think its a great time to go for the ddr5 era amd platform. Exciting times!
Ooo nice, the new build sounds interesting - I've always wanted to try a mITX build :) I think your logic is great - I would definitely hold off for a week or two and see what the 9000 series reviews look like. I recently picked up the 7600 for a NAS build (it was heavily reduced, right before AMD announced they were delaying the 9000 series), it has been a great chip so far. Good luck on your build - both the 9600x and 7600x would be brilliant CPUs for it.
I swear the only tech product that has a naming that makes sense is Playstation.
Everything else is an exercise in absurdity. From CPU's to GPU's and don't get me even started on monitors.
Hah yes I agree entirely, lots of naming conventions have gone OTT for sure - it's especially annoying when AMD's CPU and GPU names start to clash (you Google a Ryzen CPU, and the results are for Radeon GPUs!) - or when Intel and AMD's CPUs start get confusingly similar. It's a bit frustrating all round.
Can u explayn please how the rayzen cpu - motherboard relation is. I mean i want to build new pc but ive never used ryzen. Currently using my old. am3+ mb with fx8350 cpu 32gb ram and rx580. But i can barely run any new game even on low settings. So back to the question, when i see am5 motherboards some of them say supporting 7000-8000 ryzen. And some say support only 9000 series Ryzen. What is better to buy ?does going for motherboard with 9000 series support = more longevity of the build or its gonna have better performance than a build using 7000/8000 series , do i have to change mb+cpu in about 1 or 2 years since they obviously release new ryzen series every 12-18 months. ???
Sure - so an AM5 motherboard runs with DDR5 RAM and you'll need the 7000 series onwards. AM5 is the most future proofed option as a result, because it will be supported for many years. However an AM4 motherboard will be a good budget option - it goes up to the 5000 series CPUs, and supports DDR4. This will be a much cheaper option. That's what I have in my workstation PC (a 5900X CPU and 64GB of DDR4 RAM) and it plays all games with minimal issue, especially at 1440p. So it mainly depends on your budget.
voice and lip does not matches
Thanks for the feedback. Throughout the video or a specific part? I didn't do anything differently here and the audio syncing looks decent to me, but can check again.