Re-Build want a Intel build

@DylRicho Remember to keep it low price and LGA1151 won't go anytime soon, you still be looking another year or two.

Regards to Ryzen 5 1600, comparing it to the Core i5-7600K isn't much in it. Just that the Ryzen offers more threads and cores and yet i5 offers up to 3.8GHz. Unless you go with Ryzen 7 1700 or and high i5/i7 but that's when the costs goes up to £300

LOOK, I got my desktop five years ago with an 2011 socket, about 15 to 16 months later they stopped 2011. all new things that come out will end. Also when buying that if you get the right gear and look after your gear it will last. My desktop was built 5 years ago and till this day it runs high settings. My CPU did cost over $400

A friend of mine told me this:

You'll still be able to buy it, but it won't be getting any new features.
Intel is moving to a new socket.
 
@DylRicho Remember to keep it low price and LGA1151 won't go anytime soon, you still be looking another year or two.

Regards to Ryzen 5 1600, comparing it to the Core i5-7600K isn't much in it. Just that the Ryzen offers more threads and cores and yet i5 offers up to 3.8GHz. Unless you go with Ryzen 7 1700 or and high i5/i7 but that's when the costs goes up to £300

LOOK, I got my desktop five years ago with an 2011 socket, about 15 to 16 months later they stopped 2011. all new things that come out will end. Also when buying that if you get the right gear and look after your gear it will last. My desktop was built 5 years ago and till this day it runs high settings. My CPU did cost over $400

It has been proven that Ryzen is better for streaming than an Intel system. Without getting too technical, the way the Intel processor communicates between its cores and cache just isn't as well suited as Ryzen's.

Clock frequencies are not really a good measure of performance. It's not 1996 anymore. My reasoning for suggesting Ryzen is not only due to his workload, but also due to the projected lifespan of the platform. @Vaador can purchase a six-core processor now, and in two years time, upgrade to an eight-core, or perhaps even a twelve-core, without changing the motherboard. This is something Intel really needs to work on.
 
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