I'm sure it's not the answer that you're looking for, but...Anyone know the significance of the M0 stepping?
I'm sure it's not the answer that you're looking for, but...
It does mean it's undergone a helluva lot of revision. 13... yikes. Guess it's not as bad as Ivy Bridge (S1), but it's no wonder why those two were/are so late.
I'm sure it's not the answer that you're looking for, but...
It does mean it's undergone a helluva lot of revision. 13... yikes. Guess it's not as bad as Ivy Bridge (S1), but it's no wonder why those two were/are so late.
Double the cores, double the heat?
Am I seeing that correctly? Max boost @ .978V with all 16 logical cores enabled?
Double the cores, double the heat?
Heat has to do with the amount of power being consumed.
Indeed it's not going to consume more than any other Haswell chip when running the same amount of threads, still it makes me wonder if it isn't time for a more advanced overclock vs the regular "all cores at maximum speed POZZIBLE!". With this many cores wouldn't make more sense go the turbo bins route and put say +15 bins on single thread load, and less for any increase up to say +5/6 on full load?
Indeed it's not going to consume more than any other Haswell chip when running the same amount of threads, still it makes me wonder if it isn't time for a more advanced overclock vs the regular "all cores at maximum speed POZZIBLE!". With this many cores wouldn't make more sense go the turbo bins route and put say +15 bins on single thread load, and less for any increase up to say +5/6 on full load?
Say, ~5.5GHz, the rest of the CPU @ ~4.7GHz.
That may not go as well as you'd think. I'm sure it will vary somewhat with each individual chip, but using my 3930K as an example, it didn't seem to have any spectacular or dud cores. I found this out while trying to push up some single threaded benchmarking scores. All six are stable @5.1, but even with the other cores disabled not a single one of them was stable @5.2 within the voltage range I was willing to push.If Intel allows for that kind of tweaking, I'd be curious to see how much more a single core or two can overclock compared to a whole CPU approach.
That makes me mad that they made the 5930 - 6 core instead of 8 like the 4960 and 4930 were both 6 core.![]()
If Intel released an 8-core at $500 level right away, it would cannibalize their 4770/4790K sales and reduce their profit margins.
If anything what they did makes more sense. Before, they were charging $1K for more or less extra cache a small bump in clocks over the 4930. In terms of manufacturing, it doesn't cost them much more to make the 4960 vs. 4930, but how many enthusiasts had any incentive to buy the 4960X? Intel was losing out on a lot of profits. Now by moving the 8-core exclusively into the X realm this finally justifies the X designation. To be honest, it's a win-win. Intel will have a new wave of customers who will finally step up from the xx30 CPU to the X flagship, and in turn their profitability and profit margins will increase. Enthusiasts who desire to have the latest and greatest and also use the PC for productivity will like the move from 6 to 8 cores and will have the funds to pay for it.
Offering a 6-core 5820 is also big news for the desktop PC market since many people who use the PC for productivity (other than games) will now consider the X99 platform over Z97. For these users, Intel is also opening up an upgrade path to Broadwell-E - more profits for Intel and a significantly faster CPU for productivity for the consumer at the $400 and $1K levels.
If Intel released an 8-core at $500 level right away, it would cannibalize their 4770/4790K sales and reduce their profit margins. The only other possibility I saw was releasing an 8-core for $700-750. But I totally understand what they did. They are enticing some PC enthusiasts who care about productivity to choose the X99 platform with the 5820, are catering specifically to enthusiast gamers with 4790K, and also satisfying the ultra high end enthusiasts/productivity users with the 8-core as the flagship. It's a very smart strategy. Over time we'll get an 8-core for $500.
If Intel is really going to give us a ~$400 USD 6-core 5820, this will sell like hot cakes!
That may not go as well as you'd think. I'm sure it will vary somewhat with each individual chip, but using my 3930K as an example, it didn't seem to have any spectacular or dud cores. I found this out while trying to push up some single threaded benchmarking scores. All six are stable @5.1, but even with the other cores disabled not a single one of them was stable @5.2 within the voltage range I was willing to push.
I WANT to be excited about 4790k, but I can't help but suspect that quad cores are on their way out as the best gaming option. I think the performance delta between quad and hex is going to broaden very quickly with upcoming titles. Can't bring myself to go back to quad for this reason, regardless of how high it clocks. I'd like to be convinced since a 4790k would be a good priced option, but I think 6 cores is where its at for gaming pretty much.
Give me an 8-core laptop.