Fjodor2001
Diamond Member
- Feb 6, 2010
- 4,277
- 614
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oh of course they could sell it for a lot less, the Xeon E5-2620 goes for ~$400
But it's only 6C @ 2 GHz.
oh of course they could sell it for a lot less, the Xeon E5-2620 goes for ~$400
The funny thing is that they could probably make an 8 core Haswell without iGPU, and it wouldn't occupy much more die area than a 3570K (perhaps 30% more). So if CPUs were priced based on die area alone, it could probably be sold for $300-400 or so.
But then there's the marketing aspect of this unfortunately that stops this from happening... :\
Also, it's interesting to note that a 96 EU chip with 4 CPU cores would probably allocate something like 70% of the die area to the iGPU, 20% to the CPU cores (including caches), and 10% to the rest like memory controller.
Then you're no longer buying a CPU with iGPU. You're buying a GPU with iCPU...![]()
Yes, that could be a possibility. But going from 20->96 EUs without any solution to the memory bandwidth problem does not seem like a balanced design. So perhaps there is some truth to the eDRAM rumor after all, although some people here does not believe in that.
Does anyone know the theoretical flops of Ivy's HD4k?
But it's only 6C @ 2 GHz.
Intel should come up with a new name.
Core
Core 2
Core i
Core i 2nd generation
Core i 3rd generation
Are they really going to call Haswell Core i 4th generation?
Intel should come up with a new name.
Core
Core 2
Core i
Core i 2nd generation
Core i 3rd generation
Are they really going to call Haswell Core i 4th generation?
Yes they are, and I dont see the problem with it.
Not even a remotely valid comparison...It's like with the iPad. You have the iPad, the new iPad, and the newer than the new iPad, which currently is the newest. Soon we'll have the newer than the previously newest iPad.
Totally clear...
Not even a remotely valid comparison...
A progressive series of numerals is not equivalent to Apple's inconsistent naming scheme.
Only thing I can think of is to troll the rumor spreaders.Fair enough, the Intel Core naming is far better. Especially since they have a digit in the model number indicating the generation.
But it I don't get why they change from e.g.:
2500K->3570K (instead of 3500K)
3570K->4670K (instead of 4570K)
I've not been able to find the logic behind that. Has anyone else?
Fair enough, the Intel Core naming is far better. Especially since they have a digit in the model number indicating the generation.
But it I don't get why they change from e.g.:
2500K->3570K (instead of 3500K)
3570K->4670K (instead of 4570K)
I've not been able to find the logic behind that. Has anyone else?
It's like with the iPad. You have the iPad, the new iPad, and the newer than the new iPad, which currently is the newest. Soon we'll have the newer than the previously newest iPad.
Totally clear...
NUC, Mac Mini etc?
Fair enough, the Intel Core naming is far better. Especially since they have a digit in the model number indicating the generation.
But I don't get why they change from e.g.:
2500K->3570K (instead of 3500K)
3570K->4670K (instead of 4570K)
I've not been able to find the logic behind that. Has anyone else?
The 4670K has a 100MHz bump in clock speed over the 3570K. As far as the "70" designation goes, I have no idea.
