It didn't? At $500 for the top end SKU, it's about 85% the retail price of an i7-6850k.When did this -30% expectation change to 0%?
I asked him for source, and he claims he has an insider. I don't know the guy, so take it with a large grain of salt.Re-post from benchmarks topic:
Someone at reddit claims the 1700(no X) is 8C/16T 3.1Ghz base and 3.7Ghz max Turbo SKU. Fits well with 65W bracket.
I asked him for source, and he claims he has an insider. I don't know the guy, so take it with a large grain of salt.
They surely have a pattern. I initially expected 20%. But they don't have to use past factors based on perf. Platform features, power efficiency are somewhat different, too.It didn't? At $500 for the top end SKU, it's about 85% the retail price of an i7-6850k.
When has AMD not priced based on performance compared to Intel's offerings?
Re-post from benchmarks topic:
Someone at reddit claims the 1700(no X) is 8C/16T 3.1Ghz base and 3.7Ghz max Turbo SKU. Fits well with 65W bracket.
Is it just me or does the naming scheme makes no sense sense at all. I mean why call two 8c16t cpus 1700 and 1800 over a 200MHz clock difference and then call a 6c12t core 1600? what if they realize a new 6c12t with a 200Mhz bump, are they going to call it 1700-6c??
Also I am not sure a 200MHz clock difference between 1800X and 1700X justify a £90 price difference considering both are unlocked with XFR. maybe £30 at most. I along with most people in this thread would probably go for the 1700X instead.
I call BS.
I really hate AMD's marketing. Why continue to go with 7/5/3 naming scheme? This is a brand new platform, these idiots need to break free from the old AMD and quit copying Intel in their naming schemes.
I call marketing wank... Too many sources to be BS at this point... Sounds to me like AMDs idle marketing team got a wild hair up their ass and are getting over excited for Ryzen... You know the gems AMD Marketing is capable of, why is this so surprising?
Will it be shipped worldwide at the same time or will the EU get it first, like Skylakes iirc?
Also since the cpus will be unlocked, why do I need xfr? I mean if the 1700X gets another 200-300Mhz, isn't it nearly the same if I give the multiplier 2X-3X myself? It's not gonna break the wattage bank, is it? Nor the temps with the D14 I am going to slap on it.
That base clock is IMO too high. Take for example Trinity.I asked him for source, and he claims he has an insider. I don't know the guy, so take it with a large grain of salt.
And once more, pricing is the best early indicator of performance. Assuming that AMD is indeed pricing their top end SKU comparably to an i7-6850k, then that's roughly the level of performance that should be expected from it. (Probably a bit better in multi-threaded workloads, which is balanced by being worse in single-threaded.) Which, as usual, doesn't bode well for the consumer markets where usage scenarios beyond 4 cores are few and far between.
So IMHO The base clock of Ryzen 7 1700 will be 3,0 GHz at best, but that is IMHO still not likely, I expect 2,8-2,9 GHz to be safe.
That base clock is IMO too high. Take for example Trinity.
The 95W A10-5800K had base clock 3,8 GHz with turbo boost 4,1 GHz. The 65W SKU that was based on it (A10-5700) had base clock 3,4 GHz with 4,0 GHz max boost. The base clock penalty in other words was more than 10 %. But it was also a second generation 32nm product (after Llano - or third if we count Zambezi).
So IMHO The base clock of Ryzen 7 1700 will be 3,0 GHz at best, but that is IMHO still not likely, I expect 2,8-2,9 GHz to be safe.
I really hate AMD's marketing. Why continue to go with 7/5/3 naming scheme? This is a brand new platform, these idiots need to break free from the old AMD and quit copying Intel in their naming schemes (who copied BMW lol)
Is it just me or does the naming scheme makes no sense sense at all. I mean why call two 8c16t cpus 1700 and 1800 over a 200MHz clock difference and then call a 6c12t core 1600? what if they realize a new 6c12t with a 200Mhz bump, are they going to call it 1700-6c??
Also I am not sure a 200MHz clock difference between 1800X and 1700X justify a £90 price difference considering both are unlocked with XFR. maybe £30 at most. I along with most people in this thread would probably go for the 1700X instead.
Is it just me or does the naming scheme makes no sense sense at all. I mean why call two 8c16t cpus 1700 and 1800 over a 200MHz clock difference and then call a 6c12t core 1600? what if they realize a new 6c12t with a 200Mhz bump, are they going to call it 1700-6c??
Also I am not sure a 200MHz clock difference between 1800X and 1700X justify a £90 price difference considering both are unlocked with XFR. maybe £30 at most. I along with most people in this thread would probably go for the 1700X instead.
I call BS.