- Aug 25, 2001
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Where do you see prices going?
kwalkingcraze mentioned that he believes that CPU prices are going up.
I felt, prior to now, that prices were on a downward trend still, at least, in terms of price/performance.
But thinking about Intel's declining market share in desktop CPUs, thanks to Ryzen, compounded by the overall decline in terms of PC unit sales numbers, something that both the HDD as well as the GPU industry players have had to contend with, and in the case of GPU makers, rising prices - where does that leave Intel?
We've already started to see their strategy around the G4560 and its reduced supply, due to that chip being such a good value, relative to all of their other dual-cores in their current CPU lineup.
Will we see absolute prices on Intel CPUs actually rise? Is Intel's declining volume, due to declining PC unit sales, an even bigger economic "lever", than the competition from AMD right now?
IOW, is this the end of under-$100 CPUs and APUs? And how much of this trend is due to lower unit volumes, versus how much of this is due to lesser-cored CPUs (dual-cores, mostly) no longer being capable of giving reasonable performance in today's desktop software, and internet content browsing (both advanced video codecs, and script-heavy pages, or even both at the same time).
I think that the rumors that Intel's upcoming CFL-S CPU lineup contains i3 SKUs that are 4C/4T, (or possibly even 4C/8T, depending on which rumors you believe), indicate to me that at least this "minimum CPU core count software effect" is largely true.
(This is why I recommend a Ryzen 5 1600 CPU as an entry-level desktop CPU, paired with at minimum a GT1030 for modern internet content-consumption. Yes, the Zen/Vega-based APUs can't come soon enough, IMHO.)
kwalkingcraze mentioned that he believes that CPU prices are going up.
I felt, prior to now, that prices were on a downward trend still, at least, in terms of price/performance.
But thinking about Intel's declining market share in desktop CPUs, thanks to Ryzen, compounded by the overall decline in terms of PC unit sales numbers, something that both the HDD as well as the GPU industry players have had to contend with, and in the case of GPU makers, rising prices - where does that leave Intel?
We've already started to see their strategy around the G4560 and its reduced supply, due to that chip being such a good value, relative to all of their other dual-cores in their current CPU lineup.
Will we see absolute prices on Intel CPUs actually rise? Is Intel's declining volume, due to declining PC unit sales, an even bigger economic "lever", than the competition from AMD right now?
IOW, is this the end of under-$100 CPUs and APUs? And how much of this trend is due to lower unit volumes, versus how much of this is due to lesser-cored CPUs (dual-cores, mostly) no longer being capable of giving reasonable performance in today's desktop software, and internet content browsing (both advanced video codecs, and script-heavy pages, or even both at the same time).
I think that the rumors that Intel's upcoming CFL-S CPU lineup contains i3 SKUs that are 4C/4T, (or possibly even 4C/8T, depending on which rumors you believe), indicate to me that at least this "minimum CPU core count software effect" is largely true.
(This is why I recommend a Ryzen 5 1600 CPU as an entry-level desktop CPU, paired with at minimum a GT1030 for modern internet content-consumption. Yes, the Zen/Vega-based APUs can't come soon enough, IMHO.)
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