Intel's 22nm SoC process (the one used for their eDRAM) is much more expensive than typical memory processes.
Source?
NUCs are expensive and those ULV Core i5 processors are premium priced because they are intended for mobile.
With desktop processor and sale priced parts I think coming in under $300 should be possible.
P.S. Here was a build I put together earlier this year for around $337 (lower if I waited for the usual rebates to appear). With a large iGPU integrated into the processor, DRAM-less SSD with TLC V-NAND, today's lower RAM prices I am hoping for closer to $250.
Would a skylake igpu still need edram to work well even with (dual channel) ddr4?
I think they should definitely bring out a g3258 replacement with as many EUs as can possibly be fitted into the die,just to make the review sites with those gpu benchmarks shut up already.
But then again intel has to very careful,if AMD shuts down they might have to face monopoly charges.
How many games do you expect to be able to install on a system with a tiny V-NAND SSD?
And you really think an integrated GPU with over 7X the number of EUs and a pair of massive eDRAM caches are going to add less than $55 to the price?
Maybe if AMD somehow surprise us with a fantastic Zen with massive IGP and HBM cache/GPU memory, Intel could react with aggressive pricing on Kaby Lake. But I don't really see it happening.
The slump exists because nobody can produce massively faster cpus,if intel (or anybody) could double(or even get 20% higher) cpu power every year then there would be no slump,people would buy a new cpu every generation,maybe every second gen.Because there is a slump in the PC market, I think we will start seeing Intel giving more and holding back less than they did in the past.
That's the current state of things, and has been for at least 8 years. No, "soon," about it. That's much of the reality behind the, "death of the desktop."No.
What I am refering to, is simple.
If software does not become better at multi-threading, then soon nobody will buy new CPUs, except for replacement when hardware dies.
The slump exists because nobody can produce massively faster cpus,if intel (or anybody) could double(or even get 20% higher) cpu power every year then there would be no slump,people would buy a new cpu every generation,maybe every second gen.
By the way, this part would be so large that it would not fit onto an LGA 1151 socket. Same as the Haswell GT3e, it would only be available as a soldered BGA part.
2+4e doesnt make sense. 2+3e is what we gonna get in the U segment. But there is also a power saving element there.
Just get 4+4e, its less than 20mm2 bigger and offers the full monty when you already went all the way for GT4e.
Of the three possible/plausible desktop configurations for a GT4e chip (2C/4T, 4C/4T, and 4C/8T), I would think the 2C/4T i3 config would be the MOST logical, since it would do the most to meet the needs of people currently looking for a system with a cheap dGPU. The least logical is the 4C/8T chip
What would this i3+GT4e of yours cost? (I want a realistic Intel price)
To me it sounds like 200$ price. Assuming lower clocked.
My first impression was around that, yes. That would put it in the same price range as several Haswell 4c/4t chips, though you have to take into account that there'd be a price premium for the iGPU. Looking at current Haswell/Haswell Refresh i3 prices:
http://pcpartpicker.com/parts/cpu/#s=11&f=34,40&sort=a7&page=1
The 4370 has actually declined significantly in price to the point where you can pick one up for $150 (not counting rebates, Microcenter in-store pricing, etc). So I'm thinking for around $200, you might get something in the ballpark of 3.6-3.8 GHz base clockspeed from such a hypothetical chip plus the fat GT4e to go with it. Maybe I'm just being overly-optimistic.
Its hard to judge GT4 Gen9 yet, since its obviously bottlenecked on GT2 and you cant scale it up from current numbers. Remember it will also be 72 EU contra the Broadwells 40.
GT 740 (aka GTX 650) is about equal to a HD 7750 GDDR5.
HD 7770 (aka R7 250X) has around 50% more GPU core (in the form of stream processors/clockspeed, 640sp @ 1000 Mhz vs 512sp @ 800 Mhz) compared to HD7750 so I expect GT4e (which has 50% more EUs compared to GT3e) to be around the level of HD7770/R7 250X.
A $200 desktop chip using high end Core i3 combined with GT4e would probably be a fairly low volume item and here is why:
Most gamers buying a high end Core i3 are likely going to want a much stronger GPU than what the GT4e has to offer.
Says who?
