AMD's Phenom II X4 980 Black Edition wears the gigahertz crown
At only $195, it's hard to deny that AMD's new Phenom II X4 980 Black  Edition desktop chip is a bargain. Its four cores hum along at 3.7GHz,  the fastest base clock speed of any consumer CPU, and the  unlocked multiplier should make it trivial for overclockers to push this  beast to 4GHz and beyond. The 980 slides right into the same price point as the previous champ, the Phenom II X4 975,  and knocks a few bucks off the former clock-frequency king. All of this  seems like great news for AMD fans. Of course, if you're starting from  scratch and not just looking to upgrade an aging AM3 rig, keep in mind  that only $30 more scores you the mid-range  Core i5-2500K that  consistently outperforms the 980, consumes less power, and also has an  unlocked multiplier. Guess there's always the graphics market  if you care to see AMD being competitive. For the nitty-gritty on how  its latest central processing unit stacks up, see the source links.
Core i5-2500K that  consistently outperforms the 980, consumes less power, and also has an  unlocked multiplier. Guess there's always the graphics market  if you care to see AMD being competitive. For the nitty-gritty on how  its latest central processing unit stacks up, see the source links.
 Core i5-2500K that  consistently outperforms the 980, consumes less power, and also has an  unlocked multiplier. Guess there's always the graphics market  if you care to see AMD being competitive. For the nitty-gritty on how  its latest central processing unit stacks up, see the source links.
Core i5-2500K that  consistently outperforms the 980, consumes less power, and also has an  unlocked multiplier. Guess there's always the graphics market  if you care to see AMD being competitive. For the nitty-gritty on how  its latest central processing unit stacks up, see the source links.

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