Why would you do tick/tock upgrades?
Because I can.... Because I can.
Why would you do tick/tock upgrades?
Is the verdict here that I should hold onto my 3770k because it maybe a sidegrade at best?
I have to disagree. Cause and effect are backwards here. The reason why computer sales are down is because nobody can increase the performance of cpu's significantly. Nobody needs to upgrade when newer machines aren't any faster than older machines. It's not because there's no money in the market so nobody is bothering trying to improve things. We have already been knocking on the end of moore's law for a couple of years now. Datafarms and supercomputers are only a small slice of the market even if they are the highest profit margin. And besides, it looks like Intel failed at increasing performance/watt too.Intel are very far from incapable, it just isn't their priority right now.
From their point of view, the most profitable customers who demand performance improvements are those who run massive datafarms, or build supercomputers- the kind who buy literally thousands of high margin Xeon chips. And what do they care about most? Performance/W. Look at why they shut down Roadrunner, because it cost too much to run compared to modern designs. When your compute cluster uses 2.5 megawatts of power and runs flat out 24/7, damn straight you care about efficiency. They want Intel to make chips which are as efficient as possible (maximum performance/W), and then they buy thousands and thousands of cores.
I have to disagree. Cause and effect are backwards here. The reason why computer sales are down is because nobody can increase the performance of cpu's significantly. Nobody needs to upgrade when newer machines aren't any faster than older machines. It's not because there's no money in the market so nobody is bothering trying to improve things. We have already been knocking on the end of moore's law for a couple of years now. Datafarms and supercomputers are only a small slice of the market even if they are the highest profit margin. And besides, it looks like Intel failed at increasing performance/watt too.
I have to disagree. Cause and effect are backwards here. The reason why computer sales are down is because nobody can increase the performance of cpu's significantly. Nobody needs to upgrade when newer machines aren't any faster than older machines. It's not because there's no money in the market so nobody is bothering trying to improve things. We have already been knocking on the end of moore's law for a couple of years now. Datafarms and supercomputers are only a small slice of the market even if they are the highest profit margin. And besides, it looks like Intel failed at increasing performance/watt too.
Modern PCs are vastly more powerful than older ones, but people still hold onto them. My parents only just ditched a couple of months ago a 1.6GHz Pentium 4 machine with 1GB RAM and a Geforce 3. Why did it take them that long to replace it? Because it did everything they asked of it. I remember back in the 90s, when my father would replace his PC almost every year because he desperately needed more power just to crunch spreadsheets and documents. What on earth does your average user do that needs a 4GHz watercooled i7? Nothing, that's what. Us power users are a minority.
as a former purchaser of computers in "business" (whatever that is supposed to mean), power consumption was NEVER on the radar. never ever
Us power users are a minority.
Computing has changed, desktop isn't the primary purchase for new computing devices for the average consumer and mass market. Consider the typical use of a computing device: media consumption, browsing, email. 10 years ago this required a desktop PC. Now you can do all of the same things on a tablet, and that is what the mass market buys.
So you don't know what business purchasing is, but yet claim to have done it.
Alrighty then...
It is pretty clear that anyone who's experiential reference point is based on the past will be stuck living in the past unless they accept the realities of the present.
10yrs ago power was certainly less of a concern, but it was already becoming one. 20yrs ago you could argue that power consumption of the average employee computer was less not much of a concern. But today that is certainly a laughably false position to take.
10yrs ago in the USA we had gasoline that was nearly $1/gallon, not the same situation now, not by a long shot. Anyone that thinks energy consumption is not a concern on the minds of businesses is someone who is raising their hand and waving it around when asked the question "are you living in the past?".
The majority of desktops are in sleep mode for 70-95% of their service lives, so total power use is usually fine. Exceptions to this require changing power settings, which few users do. In addition, the current Energy Star certification is actually not bad. Hardware is generally more efficient, and OEMs do know to care about noise, so the consumer has to do little or no research on the matter.On the other hand, the majority of Desktop power users and Gamers care more about performance/price than lower power usage. And it seems that the last two years the performance/price has been stagnated.
AMD is also at fault here, if they had a much faster CPU Intel would have been pressed to release a $300 6-core CPU long ago.
It is pretty clear that anyone who's experiential reference point is based on the past will be stuck living in the past unless they accept the realities of the present.
10yrs ago power was certainly less of a concern, but it was already becoming one. 20yrs ago you could argue that power consumption of the average employee computer was less not much of a concern. But today that is certainly a laughably false position to take.
10yrs ago in the USA we had gasoline that was nearly $1/gallon, not the same situation now, not by a long shot. Anyone that thinks energy consumption is not a concern on the minds of businesses is someone who is raising their hand and waving it around when asked the question "are you living in the past?".
You are talking about gamers right? Crysis3 is the first piece of software that will actually hog into those 4+ cores .. As I see it, the need for those cores have only just begun.
Modern PCs are vastly more powerful than older ones, but people still hold onto them. My parents only just ditched a couple of months ago a 1.6GHz Pentium 4 machine with 1GB RAM and a Geforce 3. Why did it take them that long to replace it? Because it did everything they asked of it. I remember back in the 90s, when my father would replace his PC almost every year because he desperately needed more power just to crunch spreadsheets and documents. What on earth does your average user do that needs a 4GHz watercooled i7? Nothing, that's what. Us power users are a minority.
Actually BF3 Multiplayer is way more in need of more than 4 cores/threads than Crysis 3.
Allright, but point sorta remains the same
"Put simply, for mainstream users, hardware has caught up to and surpassed software."
- Crysis3 and BF3 is pushing that hardware right now and come oculus rift-kind of hardware, kinnect-kind of hardware, eeg based controls and next gen AI's, I look forward to games pushing the hardware to its limits(cores/threads) once again.
Haswell is good- just not for desktop.
I am debating about the i7-4770k in a thread about the i7-4770k and the last time that I checked this the i7-4770k was a desktop cpu.
I'd estimate that about 80% of your posts in this forum consists of "AMD is going to..." type mantra, so you posting what you did above is just forehead-smacking irony.
Put simply, for mainstream users, hardware has caught up to and surpassed software.
I doubt it.
Modern PCs are vastly more powerful than older ones, but people still hold onto them. My parents only just ditched a couple of months ago a 1.6GHz Pentium 4 machine with 1GB RAM and a Geforce 3. Why did it take them that long to replace it? Because it did everything they asked of it. I remember back in the 90s, when my father would replace his PC almost every year because he desperately needed more power just to crunch spreadsheets and documents. What on earth does your average user do that needs a 4GHz watercooled i7? Nothing, that's what. Us power users are a minority.
