Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 212 examens experts du AMD A10-5800K 3.8GHz Socket FM2 et l'estimation moyenne est 85%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour AMD A10-5800K 3.8GHz Socket FM2.
(85%)
212 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
(92%)
644 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
850100212
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Polyvalence
Performances face au i3
OC facile
GPU
Prix
Consommation électrique au repos
Augmentation des performances de la partie graphique
Augmentation du niveau de performances de la partie CPU
Publié: 2012-10-03, Auteur: Scott , review by: Techreport.com
Extrait: AMD's Trinity chip is making a debut, but it's not exactly a fresh face. We reviewed the mobile version of Trinity back in May and had mostly positive things to say about it. The second generation of AMD's do-everything, converged APU offered solid progre...
Perhaps the key point to take away from our findings is that, while the unequivocal recommendation of the A10-5800K isn't going to find its way into this review, AMD has done exactly what it needed to do following the success of Llano. Trinity is much ...
Publié: 2012-10-03, Auteur: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Excellent integrated graphics performance, adequate CPU horsepower for the price.
AMD is leaving the performance race all to Intel. New motherboard needed. Unlocked multiplier doesn't translate into good overclocking.
So far we've focused on the performance of AMD's new A10-5800K, but we've yet to touch on what is arguably the most important piece of the puzzle: its price. Out of the gate, AMD has priced its new chip at $130, which happens to match the Core i3-3220. Bu...
Extrait: Trinity. Where to start? I find myself asking that question, as the road to this release is somewhat tortuous. Trinity, as a product code name, came around in early 2011. The first working silicon was shown that Summer. The first actual release...
Extrait: In terms of the A10-5800K performance to other integrated graphics processors and for the compute performance to other processors, as mentioned already, those results are still to be published in the coming days. For those wanting a preview of the AMD...
CPU Performance Moderately Improved, FM2 Socket (Not Backwards Compatible)
We are now in the age of "Trinity". AMD uses that codename because they want you to look at the platform in terms of CPU, GPU, and supported accelerated software. They throw software into the mix because we are at that transitional phase where program c...
Extrait: Although AMD's second-generation mainstream APU platform, codename Trinity, launched months ago in notebooks the official desktop launch is today. Rumor has it that AMD purposefully delayed the desktop Trinity launch to clear out unsold Llano inventories ...
The pricing structure for the Trinity APUs can best be described as aggressive. In fact, there isn't a Trinity processor in the lot that retails for more than $122.00. Below is a chart displaying the prices for the Trinity offerings. To be honest, bas...
Because AMD split its Trinity architecture introduction up into two days of coverage, I'm forced to draw a conclusion today that runs counter to the efficiency data we just presented. At its stock settings, the company's flagship A10-5800K is generall...
Much improved graphics performance over previous model, Competes well against similarly priced Intel Core i3 CPUs with weaker integrated graphics, Unlocked for overclocking
CPU-specific performance doesn't get as much of a boost as graphics, New FM2 socket means previous-gen AMD APU owners will need a new motherboard
AMD's latest high-end APU sports slightly improved CPU performance and nearly double the graphics muscle of last year's A8 chip. It's a good choice for those looking to build a budget gaming or media PC. Just know you'll need fast RAM to get the best per...