ViRGE
Elite Member, Moderator Emeritus
- Oct 9, 1999
- 31,516
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Keep in mind that the more cores Intel adds, the slower the chip gets. To use SNB-E as an example, it's one thing to jump from 95W to 130W in exchange for two more cores at roughly the same clockspeed, but if you moved on to the 8 core Xeons they both consumed more power and had lower clockspeeds at the same time.
Intel isn't going to sell a $1000 Core i7 that gets whipped by their existing CPUs in 1-6 thread scenarios.
Intel isn't going to sell a $1000 Core i7 that gets whipped by their existing CPUs in 1-6 thread scenarios.