Wala man cguro sayop sa pagpares ug Core i5 ug H61. For example, H61 vs Z77 chipset. Tested and certified raman sila both makautilize sa performance sa i5. Aside from Overclocking feature wala may maka bottleneck nga feature sa H61 sa pagpadagan niya sa i5. Tanang instuction sets sa i5 supported raman sa H61.
Ang sayop diha kay wala gimatched ang components sa usage scenario sa owner. Nganong palit man sya i5 kung pang surf2x raman.
Chipset Differences: Do You Really Need a Z77? - Gamer's Nexus | Gaming Hardware, Culture, Features, and PC Builds
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There are three primary reasons you'd need an upper-range chipset: A high-end build, for fun/enthusiast purposes, or because you plan to make substantial upgrades as your system ages. For the most part, unless complex GPU arrays and Intel's SRT are a concern, the Z75 or 990X will cover just about any mid-upper range configuration. The H77 and 970 are restrictive in their possibilities for future upgrades (and the H77 has zero CPU/RAM overclocking support, so you're stuck with what you get), but are still excellent chips for entry-level and budget-friendly assemblies. You don't need a Z77 or 990FX, just as you don't need the most expensive transportation option. If the system just needs to perform one task, like gaming, and perform it very affordably, GPU and CPU choice will more directly impact performance than chipset choice; however, again, I'll emphasize that limiting your motherboard could severely hamper future upgrade-ability."
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In general, it boils down to how interested you are in those extra features. Never planning to use SSD caching or 3-way SLI? You don't need the Z77. Though it's nice to have the extra options, should things change."