I did come to this thread to see if there was any new info about the cpus in the title. Since this entire page (and the previous) are completely void of anything of the sort, I figure I'll continue the sidetrack.
As a sidenote, remember that guy who was here earlier this year claiming that PC sales would explode and set sales records due to all these new multicore CPUs, the software was going to have a “revolution,” and that anyone who disagreed with him had “old” thinking? Yeah, he has been awfully quiet after getting thoroughly owned, hasn’t he?
Consider that the 7700K launched this year, and was the best mainstream chip you could get, which was only a slight improvement over the previous 2 crown holders of the last 4 years (6700k, 4770K). It now trades spots with i5s and AMD R5s depending on metric, and its not even a year old.
You can say intel had cannon lake 8 cores on the map for years, yet ultimately that matters nought, since they have failed to deliver that even now, and I'm sure some people at intel are in hot water over that with regards to how this year has played out.
If it wasn't for the insane increase in dram prices due to shortages and gpu inflation thanks to mining, I'd say it would be an exceptional year to build a new computer. AMD has brought high core counts up for those aiming to do some (or a lot with TR) production work, and still do a decent job gaming to a new price point (both mainstream with the R5 + R7, as well as the TR 12/16 cores), Intels response to TR by adding the HCC dies to HEDT (and cutting the price per core to nearly half of last gen to compete), as well as intels fast-tracking the CFL launch to try and compete at a core count battle - at a reasonable price if it was MSRP - all hindered by the fact any reasons to upgrade means being gouged for ram at the minimum, possibly the GPU too if you've been holding back there. That alone has probably helped the 6c CFL launch not be a nearly paper-like one - imagine demand if ram was a good buy right now?
Even now, with RR making 4c/8t + decent GPU improving laptop core counts, and intel finally doing the same 4c/8t for the low power i7 line laptop chips, the revolution of cores continues on the laptop front. Software will always have a delay, but you can be sure after this year, attempts to go wide will be a priority now, more then it has in a long time.