Fjodor2001
Diamond Member
So you mean that since Broadwell-H/K will be released in summer of 2015, it gives us desktop Skylake two years after that, i.e. in summer of 2017?Two years is plenty for Intel (~100B$ revenue).
So you mean that since Broadwell-H/K will be released in summer of 2015, it gives us desktop Skylake two years after that, i.e. in summer of 2017?Two years is plenty for Intel (~100B$ revenue).
I think you confuse the past and now. Desktop was a majority market back then. Today its the most insignificant segment in priority terms there is. And a lot people seems to be in denial of this and blaming/excuse everything else. The same goes for dGPUs for that matter.
So you mean that since Broadwell-H/K will be released in summer of 2015, it gives us desktop Skylake two years after that, i.e. in summer of 2017?
Can you imagine moving into a 10-year replacement cycle for Desktop PCs? Basically, only replace them when they fail, instead of when there is something new / faster to purchase.
This thread is a rumor, not a fact. And I actually meant 2 years for 22nm, so Intel shouldn't have any economical concerns for the 14nm launch, which I think they don't because BK earlier said they'd release Broadwell as soon as they could, but yield issues can always happen. 1Y3Q still shouldn't be a problem for Intel, so I hope 10nm doesn't get delayed because of 14nm's delay.
BTW, I hope you meant Cannonlake instead of Skylake.
It's still a big market (at least for Intel) in terms of $$s and profits, but it is probably in Intel's interest to just move enthusiast to the HEDT platform and make even bigger profits for themselves and their partners.
Intel also still relies on a process of developing the uArch on desktop x86 CPUs and building their server CPUs off that basic implementation. I wonder if that will change over the next 5-10 years.
Can you imagine moving into a 10-year replacement cycle for Desktop PCs? Basically, only replace them when they fail, instead of when there is something new / faster to purchase.
This is the scariest thing that's almost certain to happen. I don't want to have to spend $600 minimum just on a CPU and motherboard for gaming...
Boy, Devil's Canyon had better be good; otherwise I...
Wait, what will I do? Wait two years to see if AMD's new architecture is any good? Intel's really the only good high-end processor around. :\
Did we have a price inflation lately? X79 board for 190$ and CPU for 325$.
But again, the FUD in this thread is amazing. All desktop is gone cept HEDT right?
Boy, Devil's Canyon had better be good; otherwise I...
Wait, what will I do? Wait two years to see if AMD's new architecture is any good? Intel's really the only good high-end processor around. :\
It annoys me that people usually link to wccftech. They are so dirty, it's a stolen vr-zone slide without link to the source. Credits should go to vr-zone.
@Techhog - I am not sure I understand you. gaming consoles cost $400 today just to eke out 40fps @1080p on specific games. how do you expect to ur DT to be future proof for the next 5yrs but you dont want to spend $800?
Honestly, CPUs are becoming even less necessary to upgrade for gaming, with all the driver overheard reductions coming up through various APIs.Is it really a bad thing if you don't have to upgrade to play the latest titles? Even like an overclocked 920 should be good for the foreseeable future.
You miss my point. If they spend $X billion on R&D for a CPU generation, they cannot have a sales window only allowing $X/2 billion in profit or they'll make a loss.
And even if they'd make $2X billion in profit during that sales window, they'd be making higher profit per year if they'd increase the sales window so they could earn $4X billion on the $X billion invested R&D money. Now that only works when there's a lack of competition, which is what we have today within the desktop CPU arena.
There's of course still a limit to how far they can extend the sales window though, since at some point the customers will require further improvements to buy a new product.
I don't believe in "future proofing"