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Bart

posted on 14th Oct 11 at 18:04

i5 unless your video editing.
Far cheaper and far faster (core for core).


ed

posted on 14th Oct 11 at 13:19

The man brought down the i7 by mistake, he was just about to take it back up when I thought it was fate. Soooo....

Didn't realise the i5 had 2GB of RAM and the i7 had 4. Thought both the 256GB versions had 4 and with an x64 processor, why have less?


ed

posted on 14th Oct 11 at 11:32

Yup, used them before for stuff and was going to get the Mac version of Office from there as it's crazy cheap :thumbs:


Sam

posted on 14th Oct 11 at 11:31

ed - http://www.software4students.co.uk/Microsoft_Office_for_Mac_2011-details.aspx cheap as chips from there (and yes they are legit BTW)


ed

posted on 14th Oct 11 at 11:18

Decided I'm going to go for the Core i5 and use the money saved for a copy of Office and a case for it. Dodgy copy of Office doesn't seem worth it now that you can get it for so little, especially with student discounts :)


csweatherston

posted on 13th Oct 11 at 06:56

I spoke to a geeky mate last night about this.. Apparently they are 'arrandale' chips, which has <5% difference between the i5 and i7 in any task.

Suggested to save your money and go for the i5.


ed

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 17:58

On the Air, the i5 and i7 processors both have hyperthreading. I think they're Sandy Bridge, the models are: i5-2557M and i7-2677M. For the sake of a few days and a few quid I may as well get the i7.


csweatherston

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 17:25

My last built i went with the i7 over the i5 (sandybridge) Due to its hyperthreading... no other reason..

However i know nothing about notebook cpu's.. Are they lynfield?


pow

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:52

I went for the i7 over the i5 on my M11x and it's worth it IMO


ed

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:16

The i7 is £80 more too, so fairly insignificant as a percentage increase on the total cost of the machine.


John

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:16

3 days for an i7, what's the price difference?


ed

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:16

May as well mention, it's for a MacBook Air. The reviews say that the i7 is 20% faster than the i5 but coupled to 4GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, the i5 is pretty damn quick.

I guess the main thing is whether to take the impatient choice and buy the i5 and have it Monday evening or wait 3 days for the i7 as they're built to order :o


Sam

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:16

I'd probably just go for the i5 TBH, unless there was a specific reason why it had to be an i7.

i5 will obviously be cheaper as well.


pow

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:09

I have the i7. That and 8GB of RAM have never ever ever stopped on anything I've thrown at it.


Sam

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 12:07

Differences are (i5 / i7):

Processor Number: i5-2557M / i7-2677M
Max Turbo Frequency: 2.70 GHz / 2.90 GHz
Cache: 3.0 MB / 4.0 MB

Only seems to be the speed you can overclock (the "max turbo") and the level 3 cache.


ed

posted on 12th Oct 11 at 08:51

What's the difference between the Intel Core i5 and Core i7 processors? I'm buying a new notebook, and the options are a 1.7GHz Core i5 or for a few quid more I can get a 1.8Ghz Core i7. The difference in clock speed is nominal, so what else does the i7 do that the i5 doesn't?