![]() ![]() I only need a GPU to do minimal stuff - run at the native resolution of my monitors, support video playback (h.264/h.265 in HW decoding) and mostly have the correct colors. If cost isn't the primary concern, then I don't know. At this point, 21.10 and 22.04 and 20.04 HWE kernels all support AMD 5000-series APUs, so for a new Ubuntu system, it will be fine and it much more cost effective than buying a separate GPU. The video worked before I moved to a kernel with the amd GPU support, just not great. That's when the AMD drivers for the 5000 series Ryzen APUs was included. I know that the 5600G needs a kernel at least 5.10+ or later for the AMD GPU drivers to work. Have another box with a GT 430 (another low end nVidia). I've added special update steps to my weekly system patching to deal with nVidia. I can't tell the difference (1030 GT vs 5600G GPU), except that nvidia drivers are a hassle to maintain. ![]() My Ryzen 2600 has an nVidia 1030 GPU (DDR5 version). That screen is on an HDMI switch which usually shows some other devices output. I haven't looked at the screen it connect to in a few weeks. The onboard iGPU was less fps, but on the screen I couldn't see the difference. The external, overpriced GPU was an AMD 6500 XT and did get 100fps 98% of the time in the game he used. he wanted to see 100 fps in some game nearly all the time. Last week, LTT did a comparison of a 5600G with an external $200 GPU and using just the internal GPU. That's the great thing about AMD sockets - their entire line of CPUs use the same socket so there is an upgrade path for much longer than with Intel. In a few years, the higher end CPUs will drop 50% and just a CPU swap using the same RAM and MB will enable 40%-100% faster performance. Heck, LTT had a video today about used/cheap system upgrades and was recommending a B450 + Ryzen 1500 or 2600 CPU as a starter. I was trying to build a $300 system with a 65W CPU (my days of 100W+ CPUs are long over). In reality, you'll likely never use the extra performance.īut you haven't said any budget limits, so that makes it hard. there's the theory and then there's reality. * Ryzen 5600G - the built-in GPU is/was less expensive than **any** GPU I was willing to buy extra.Īs for NVMe x3 vs x4. You can always throw in a discrete GPU later.Ī few months ago, I built a $420 system with If it was me, I'd build around a Ryzen 5600/5700G and see if that met my needs. actually, your plans for your hardware can already perform a better system specially Linux Ubuntu Operating System. Much better if you don't go for Nvidia video card cause it might gives you headaches. I have zero interest in gaming and don't watch film on the computer)ġ6 GB ram is already a good one for Linux Ubuntu Operating System. (I am aiming at 16GB RAM if the budget allows. Or should I bite the bullet and invest in a graphics card as well? Ryzen 5700G only utilizes pci3 while Alder Lake uses pci4, if I got it right?, which maybe will make a difference with nvme performance? Would I reap the benefits from Vega with those tasks, or is an Alder Lake a better bet? My current one is a Core2duo with 4GB Ram and it is beginning to show signs of the hickups.įor Darktable, Gimp, web surfing and wobbly windows (love those and plays around with other effects with gnome extensions), do you recommend a Ryzen 5700G or an Alder Lake, ie 12600K or 12700 with integrated graphics? I am thinking about building a new computer. ![]()
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