What's wrong with that?
Its inferior plain simple. AMD also uses LGA in servers as a big hint. Its most likely due to motherboard makers pressuring AMD to avoid taking on the problems, should there be any. So you bend/break pins=AMD problems, not motherboard makers.
I'm bored by reading the 517th copy of the pin vs. LGA discussion. And usually I see more convincing points to have pins. So why discuss it again?
I'm bored by reading the 517th copy of the pin vs. LGA discussion. And usually I see more convincing points to have pins. So why discuss it again?
The µPGA leak was in March (supported by a Zauba entry soon afterwards), with a photographic confirmation in June. Each time: "Why no LGA? AMD is doomed." (on Twitter, Yahoo Finance, Reddit, Stock Twits, AT, SA, TPU, WCCF, you name it) OK, looking back, I think that at least this herd behaviour is funny.Simply because there hasn't been a discussion that stokes as much as this now because nobody has released a picture of AM4 or the CPU package until now even though Bristol Ridge and AM4 have been released for over a week! This is the only place that has reported it in a forum (Nobody in SemiAccurate has at least until recently).
Most people also won't apply accurate statistical methods to their observations, but just use the episodic story mode, distributing any pin related experience as it fits. Somehow this also remembers me of guys trying to impress others with stupid things, ending in broken bones or even necks. That's today's variant of natural selection (seen the Darwin Awards?).Eh, it's a good way to filter out people and their ability to fix things. If they rage about pins on a CPU, don't hire them to do anything remotely delicate. After I don't know how many CPU's and other assorted chips, I don't think I've bent more than a couple of pins. Just pay attention, and don't be drunk or high, and the pins will be fine. ;-)
I'm not against pins per se, it's just that these seem like they are going to be much more delicate than before. They have put a lot more pins in the same amount of space. Some articles say this is the most pins ever for PGA.
Well, that was LGA, so not sure what that has to do with it?Intel x58 would disagree. 1366 pins there.
Of course. The pin density per dimension is roughly ~20% higher. If hit with a hammer, there shouldn't be a noticeable delta in the result between a 1331 pin µPGA and one with 906/~940 pins.I'm not against pins per se, it's just that these seem like they are going to be much more delicate than before. They have put a lot more pins in the same amount of space. Some articles say this is the most pins ever for PGA.
Of course. The pin density per dimension is roughly ~20% higher. If hit with a hammer, there shouldn't be a noticeable delta in the result between a 1331 pin µPGA and one with 906/~940 pins.Falling onto a desk might bend the pins more (density+diameter), while they might be more flexible and the guy dropping it might be somewhat more careful in awe of their sheer number. How are we going to quantify advantages and disadvantages vs. LGA?