StinkyPinky
Diamond Member
- Jul 6, 2002
- 6,990
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Haswell is all about the mobile market. Lots of power saving means lots of marketing. Ultrabooks with 13 hr battery life is a marketers dream.
There something about going back down to 4 cores that I don't like,
...
and with games using more cores lately i'm thinking quads might be reaching their maximum life.
I couldn't have said it better. My feelings exactly.
I'm thinking, I don't game anymore, what's the point.
But I already said I don't game much, so that matters little.
Is Steamroller really on the Horizon? Haswell is in production.
Well how exactly would they increase clock speed? New manufacturing processes don't seem to be providing much benefit. They essentially need a breakthrough in materials science (à la HKMG) to get anywhere. They could implement RCM, but that's about it.
The pipeline is long enough already.
That is correct, but I wrote "threads" not cores. I meant upgrading from the 4570K to the 5770K, whatever its name will be, I mean the 4core with Hyperthreading in 14nm.My understanding is that mainstream CPUs from Intel are still all quad-core chips, as far as roadmaps that have been leaked/released show.
I think so, too. The original plan was already to cancel AM3+ in 2012 and ship an 10core FX für socket FM2. Vishera was already a goodie for the AM3+ customers, I don't think that there will be a second.No roadmap for AM3+ yet...to tell you the truth i have a hunch that AMD will abandon the AM3+ socket when Kaveri and FM3 hits the street presumably this year and consolidate all their cpu offerings on FM3 socket...Athlons,A Series and FX, if an desktop Steamroller FX rumour comes up with an integrated PCIe controller ondie, just like all Intel chips, then its a sure bet that AM3+ is dead and FM takes over, we'll find out in the months to come for sure.
I think we all know the basic problem. Intel doesn't have serious competition from AMD, or anyone else, in the desktop space.
So, they can sit back with pathetic 10-15% per year performance gains. Initially they appear to be just fine.
But this is a fallacy they are rapidly falling into.
Those performance gains are not enough for people to lay down hard earned cash for upgrades every 2-3 years.
At this point, the average Joe's PC will probably last 5-8 years before they will feel the need to upgrade.
Intel desperately needs to get back to their core business and push the envelope for desktops, work with MS and other companies to get things moving again, but they are too busy playing at someone else's game (ARM/Mobile) and milking existing tech (quad core, really, that's very 2008).
Meanwhile 90% of their business that is the core of their revenue slowly dies.
I think we all know the basic problem. Intel doesn't have serious competition from AMD, or anyone else, in the desktop space.
So, they can sit back with pathetic 10-15% per year performance gains. Initially they appear to be just fine.
But this is a fallacy they are rapidly falling into.
Those performance gains are not enough for people to lay down hard earned cash for upgrades every 2-3 years.
At this point, the average Joe's PC will probably last 5-8 years before they will feel the need to upgrade.
Intel desperately needs to get back to their core business and push the envelope for desktops, work with MS and other companies to get things moving again, but they are too busy playing at someone else's game (ARM/Mobile) and milking existing tech (quad core, really, that's very 2008).
Meanwhile 90% of their business that is the core of their revenue slowly dies.
I was considering a Haswell quad-core, but since I already own two Q9300 CPUs and two 1045T hex-core CPUs, one in a 990FX board with all the features (except PCI-E 3.0), I'm thinking, I don't game anymore, what's the point.
I might upgrade the Thuban to a Steamroller CPU, when and if they are released. 8 cores x 4Ghz sounds pretty sweet to me. Especially since many things, especially games, are becoming more multi-threaded, and not less. But I already said I don't game much, so that matters little.
I'm also thinking that with DDR4 on the horizon, that it might not make sense to upgrade to a platform with DDR3, just before that comes out, if there are any tangible performance benefits to DDR4.
So, after more than half a decade of selling overpowered CPUs for the average consumer they should selling even MORE overpowered ones so people have even LESS reason to buy new PCs. Intel should hire you as a consultant.
Overpowered? What? Where?
Matter of definition man, CPU's can *NEVER* be overpowered.
Never !!
Overpowered? What? Where?
Matter of definition man, CPU's can *NEVER* be overpowered.
Never !!
I want more than 2 SATA3 ports
Haswell is all about the mobile market. Lots of power saving means lots of marketing. Ultrabooks with 13 hr battery life is a marketers dream.
I've heard Z87 chipset will have either six or eight SATA 6Gb/s ports native.
Nah. We will get the same crappy 5 hour battery life, only in a 2 pound package instead of 2.5 pound package. :\ That is my prediction. Lower power draw = smaller battery for same battery life.
I hope that I'm wrong.
So you think a 10 core Xeon in a tablet is a good idea, huh?
Every CPU is a balance between cost, processing power, and power draw/battery life. Just turning it up to 11 isn't always the answer.
Doesn't that just grind your gears!? It grinds mine.Nah. We will get the same crappy 5 hour battery life, only in a 2 pound package instead of 2.5 pound package. :\ That is my prediction. Lower power draw = smaller battery for same battery life.

I agree. I think the "pushback" of Steamroller to 2014 was an acknowlegment that the 990FX chipset and socket AM3+ was done with upgrades. At the very least the wait will be another year.No roadmap for AM3+ yet...to tell you the truth i have a hunch that AMD will abandon the AM3+ socket when Kaveri and FM3 hits the street presumably this year and consolidate all their cpu offerings on FM3 socket...Athlons,A Series and FX, if an desktop Steamroller FX rumour comes up with an integrated PCIe controller ondie, just like all Intel chips, then its a sure bet that AM3+ is dead and FM takes over, we'll find out in the months to come for sure.
