AMD A10-7700K and AMD A6-7400K Conclusion

I started this mini-review stating that the question of the number of processors that both Intel and AMD produce all seem to differ by 100 MHz and $7, and that I had received questions as to why this is the case. Ultimately a lot of recommendations for computer components start to revolve around ‘Well for $10 more, you could get this’, and at some point you are considering something that costs $50 more. There has to be a point where you stop, especially if an IT department or system builder wants to go through and develop 200+ machines in a month.

Intel and AMD currently have different approaches to this. Intel likes to launch a big part of its stack all at once. Sometimes it will launch individual units outside this, or it will start a new line-up with one or two units then introduce the bulk later. With Haswell for example, on the socketed CPU space, we have 50 different CPUs varying in price, power, frequency, core count, threading and integrated graphics. Imagine the poor reviewer that has to test them all (insert here that I’d love to test them to get all the data, if I had time and could source them)!

AMD’s approach to Kaveri is to dribble rather than gush. Rather than overload the user base (both end-users and commercial) with a large haystack of parts, they launched two or three SKUs on day one, then one or two every 6-12 weeks since. This has some benefits, namely the improvement of the production process over time, the repeated opportunities to market new products and the opportunity to re-educate potential clients through the media. The downside of this strategy is one similar to starting with Swiss cheese and then filling in the holes – if a client wants a SKU with particular characteristics but the company does not have it, then they will go look for something else and take their money with them. It’s a method that acts as a double edged sword.

As AnandTech’s CPU editor, I get to play with a lot more SKUs than most. This means both the big shiny halo products, such as the 8-core goliaths, but also some of the higher volume dual core stuff which is more in line with a budget PC or mass PC build. With AMD’s strategy, as they have fewer processors overall, our coverage can be a little more complete than the others. AMD sampled us both the A10-7700K and the A6-7400K for this purpose, and we hope to work closely with them for future launches and get the best comparison list of their product stack.

Back to the SKUs tested for this mini-review, we can tell that the A10-7700K keeps up with the other A10 parts in our CPU testing, but as it has two fewer compute units in the integrated graphics it can lag behind a little and is more in line with the A8 processors in that regard, essentially making it more of a hybrid part. The A6-7400K fits into that budget CPU line at $64, and the results show this in both our CPU and GPU testing. The single module performs well enough in single threaded environments, but doesn’t have enough legs for the big tasks and can be swamped easily. Despite having two threads, the Bulldozer based design still has single-threaded like behavior in some tests. That being said, the graphics tests are a mixed bag. For titles that can use more threads, I can’t help but feel that it is a little held back, even at 256 SPs. For other titles, it performs on par with other processors almost double its price. Dual Graphics mode unfortunately was not possible with the A6, and it was also noticeable that some games (Shadows of Mordor in particular) took longer to load with only one module.

To say AMD’s APUs are like marmite (you either love them or hate them) is to gloss over a more complex issue. AMD’s design has its plus points and its negative points, a fact that AMD marketing knows when I speak to them. Nevertheless, they have to focus on the plus points, which include gaming at equivalent price points, DX12 support, OpenCL performance and moving forward with HSA. Using the right tool for the right job should now be considered a cliché, but it rings true when it comes to technology and more so than ever when innovative methods are continually being fashioned. Based on AMD’s Financial Analyst Day and their recent exposure into HBM (I highly suggest reading Ryan’s awesome writeup on it), I can safely say that I want to see an APU with HBM in the future. Despite the inevitability that AMD already know that people want one, I told them anyway. We will have to wait and see.

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  • akamateau - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    Hey silverblow who are you the comment NAZI? LOL

    Is the best you got, whining because I made three posts?

    What IDIOT except you would believe that ANYONE is a paid shill. What a marroon! What are you a Paid Shill for AnandHACK.

    I detest lying media hacks who distort or hide the facts.

    As a consumer I demand the know the facts and if I have to challenge gutless lying writers then I will. Whenever and however I damm well please.
  • silverblue - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    I'd love for you to meet chizow.
  • D. Lister - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    Such a collision would probably rip a hole in spacetime. :p
  • akamateau - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    @Ian Cutress

    Why no DX12 benchmarks?

    You have Starwswarm.

    You have 3dMark API OVERHEAD BENCHMARK.

    Why didn't you use them?

    No GUTS? Afraid to answer? How much money did Intel pay you to ignore DX12 Benchmarks?

    You call yourself a journalist?

    These AMD releases are all intended for Windows 10 and DX12 products and you lie about their performance.

    You are pathetic.
  • akamateau - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    If you upgrade to Windows 10 then your build will be pretty dam good. In fact it will be a far better gaming rig than ANY Intel i3, i5 or i7.
  • piasabird - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    I have a computer at home with the i3 4330 In the chart it says it costs $138 which is probably the current retail price. However, I bought mine about 1.5 years ago for about $124.95 when it was on sale from Newegg. You can often find some good deals around X-Mass or New Years. He who waits, saves.
  • jardows2 - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    For those who are hating on Ian for reviewing older products, not a product to be release tomorrow, and not using BETA or Pre-ALPHA software in review, you are ignorant at best. Here is information for anyone who might be influenced by your baseless rhetoric:

    1. NDA's. The reviewers can only publish reviews when the manufacturer allows them to
    2. Review Samples: The reviewers can only publish reviews on products they actually have in hand. A product that hasn't been released yet cant' get into their hands unless the manufacturer sends them a pre-sample. In that case, see point 1 above.
    3. Time to review. Did you not notice this was a "Mini-Review" and not an in-depth review? It takes time to do a proper review, write it up, and publish it.
    4. Bench. Anandtech writers will put their results in a database we can search and quickly find results and compare to other products. It is nonsensical for the reviewers to run every test you want, or to continue to use benchmarks that are irrelevant.
  • Edens_Remorse - Thursday, May 28, 2015 - link

    Influenced by baseless rhetoric? How about we save people from being influenced from this lousy "mini-review." From the incorrect price listings to the nonsensical approach to "reviewing" this product, everything here reeks of bias - well, that or just stupidity and incompetence. Too many helpful reviews of this product line elsewhere to accept this bullsh*t. Eteknix is a great place to look if you choose not to believe me.
  • devione - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    I'm sorry that in your world everyone else besides yourseld are apparently misinformed ignorant idiots that need to be told what to do and how to think.

    Thank God for the thought police like yourself. Heavens know where we'd be without such awesome heroes like yourself. You have my kudos and approval.
  • Edens_Remorse - Friday, May 29, 2015 - link

    Ironic. I provide an alternative assesment of the reviewed product based on facts from multiple sources that i have shared here for all to see. I have corrected blatent errors(price/performance) and confronted an agenda, yet i am the thought police. Hehe, ok.

    Sorry bud, this mini review doesn't do the product line justice. Misinformation sucks...

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