moonbogg
Lifer
- Jan 8, 2011
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So you look for good deals, and don't buy anywhere near MSRP anyway...
I don't like how old 14nm is. I feel like it's just so old and no longer fresh and good. 14nm is like stale, day old bread now.
So you look for good deals, and don't buy anywhere near MSRP anyway...
If it's faster, and not priced ridiculously, no one will care.I don't like how old 14nm is. I feel like it's just so old and no longer fresh and good. 14nm is like stale, day old bread now.
Outside maybe the 8086k I don't any top 115x "halo" has had an MSRP near let alone over $400.So you look for good deals, and don't buy anywhere near MSRP anyway...
Well, Intel has no listed RCP for the 8086K, but it's down to $379 at Micro Center.Outside maybe the 8086k I don't any top 115x "halo" has had an MSRP near let alone over $400.
While you can find deals though they are usually combo deals. Intel CPU's generally stay around MSRP even after they are replaced.
The 8086 came off as a LE gimmick so I didn't look at the price, that's why I said maybe. I think their had been some gen to gen creep in price but most of the top Consumer Halo's have been $330-$340.Well, Intel has no listed RCP for the 8086K, but it's down to $379 at Micro Center.
Seeing rumors of pricing at basically $500 for the part. Hard to justify when Amazon just had a multiple-day sale for the Ryzen 2700 for $220.If it's faster, and not priced ridiculously, no one will care.
Except you.![]()
Seeing rumors of pricing at basically $500 for the part. Hard to justify when Amazon just had a multiple-day sale for the Ryzen 2700 for $220.
AMD still seems to have "budget" written on it's back.Seeing rumors of pricing at basically $500 for the part. Hard to justify when Amazon just had a multiple-day sale for the Ryzen 2700 for $220.
I pieced together a very solid Motherboard, 16gb 3000mhz RAM, and AMD's fastest 8c/16t processor for less than Intel's upcoming 8c/16t (based on rumored pricing).
Intel's crazy hyper threading segmentation and pricing are so off-putting for consumers like me.
I hope that Intel has at least learned the lesson of supply at launch and stockpiled enough chips.
The Ryzen 1800x was a $499 product at launch. This chip will run circles around the 1800x. Having said that, I'd love to see this chip come in at $399.
I don't like how old 14nm is. I feel like it's just so old and no longer fresh and good. 14nm is like stale, day old bread now.
Assuming core count remains the same on Zen 2 (do we really need more than 8/16 on mainstream?), I can see the 9900k being the top non-HEDT processor for at least the next 12 months.
The history lesson here is that the 1800x was and is not an HEDT chip. The 2700x had an uphill fight against coffeelake at launch. No way AMD was going to be able to repeat that sort of pricing with the 8700k at $350.Forgetting our history, eh? The 1800x sported that price against Intel HEDT chips that cost twice as much and failed to perform much better. The 2700x was cheaper at launch despite being faster than the 1800x. Oh how the market has changed.
AMD still seems to have "budget" written on it's back.
Price rumors for the 9900K have varied widely.
There's no telling yet what price Intel will set, and more importantly, what price sellers will actually charge.
Intel may yet react to AMD's pressure. We just don't know yet.
I hope that Intel has at least learned the lesson of supply at launch and stockpiled enough chips.
Yeah that 1800x (and this is why there is no 2800x) existed for that price solely because the one product that could touch it was $1000. It came off as a steal and more importantly made sure they sold a crazy ton of 1700 and 1700x's by making them look like an even crazier value. It existed not because AMD was trying to make their base platform an HEDT platform they did it because it told everyone else, hey you don't have to go HEDT to get workstation performance.The history lesson here is that the 1800x was and is not an HEDT chip. The 2700x had an uphill fight against coffeelake at launch. No way AMD was going to be able to repeat that sort of pricing with the 8700k at $350.
looks to me the 2700 will be competing with the 9600k when games are concerned.
How much is a 9600k going to cost, $250?
Which is faster a i5 8400 or 2700 when gaming? I haven't kept up with this.
edit:
it seems an overclocked 2600 is needed to be equal or slightly beat or an i5 8400.
https://www.techspot.com/review/1627-core-i5-8400-vs-ryzen-5-2600/page8.html
edit: im sure a 9600k will smoke a 2700 after seeing this, mabe even a 9600 non k.
What? Intel hasn't stopped responding since Ryzen was launched.AMD still seems to have "budget" written on it's back.
Price rumors for the 9900K have varied widely.
There's no telling yet what price Intel will set, and more importantly, what price sellers will actually charge.
Intel may yet react to AMD's pressure. We just don't know yet.
I hope that Intel has at least learned the lesson of supply at launch and stockpiled enough chips.
looks to me the 2700 will be competing with the 9600k when games are concerned.
How much is a 9600k going to cost, $250?
Which is faster a i5 8400 or 2700 when gaming? I haven't kept up with this.
edit:
it seems an overclocked 2600 is needed to be equal or slightly beat or an i5 8400.
https://www.techspot.com/review/1627-core-i5-8400-vs-ryzen-5-2600/page8.html
edit: im sure a 9600k will smoke a 2700 after seeing this, mabe even a 9600 non k.
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I meant via lowering or holding prices...What? Intel hasn't stopped responding since Ryzen was launched.
We had what.. five generations of mainstream quad-cores from Intel for I think it was seven years? Then within a year Intel launches another iteration of Skylake via hexcore mainstream and then the year after we magically have an 8c/16t from Intel. Intel would much rather continue to be charging $999 on its high end socket for 8c but AMD forced them to offer consumers more. Nothing wrong with admitting that.
This is without a doubt purely a counter to AMD's play so I'm not sure what you mean in terms of Intel reacting. We DO know exactly how they reacted.
AMD may have been budget before when the gaming experiences were 30-40% different. Now that fps gap is like 10-15%. Sure people that take the hobbyism and benchmark racing to the extreme, a la 2080 Ti buyers will be discerning.
For other people that just use hardware to actually game on, a processor that is 100% more expensive for 10% more performance, the choice is probably an easy one to make. If Ferrari marketed a 500bhp car that costs $100,000 and a 550bhp car that cost $200,000, you'd expect people to scoff at the latter's value proposition. If you put two beige boxes in front of me and one was hitting 120 FPS and the other was hitting 132 FPS I wouldn't be able to tell you the difference.
Wait for a 9900K MC deal then$360 at microcenter. Now what? Come at me!
But no one games at 720p.
Graphs below pulled from Trusted Reviews https://www.trustedreviews.com/reviews/amd-ryzen-7-2700x-2
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That's the thing about CPUs now. There's a floor that if you get to, the gaming experiences are identical beyond human perception. Anyone spending hundreds extra for something only software can report back are just buying a luxury good to either brag about or benchmark or just feel warm and fuzzy inside about. Similar to fashion clothes maybe?
