That's the 7700, the 7700K is $320.Wow, 7700K retailing at $289. It's a great time for CPU enthusiasts!
https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117726&cm_re=7700k-_-19-117-726-_-Product
That's the 7700, the 7700K is $320.Wow, 7700K retailing at $289. It's a great time for CPU enthusiasts!
Up your voltage on the mesh to 1.1V, that'll be good for up to 3.2GHz on the 7900X and 7820X in my testing. 7800X silicon is too low quality to hit 3.2GHz from my experience.So with the mesh at 3ghz I'm loosing one of my nvme SSD's. I already have the voltage at 1.9, safe to go higher?
nvmI guess that's simultaneous a lol for the comback and :sadface: (maybe Intel will someday find a better TIM compound, at the least).
Here the thing, no one do streaming on the 7700K via CPU, they all use Nvidia cards, unless you have a Radeon with a crappy video encoder, you will be just fine with that.I'm thinking a slower 8 core chip will still stream better. It doesn't matter how fast the chip is. Just look at the 7700K and how it stutters in streaming despite its fast cores. I think 6/12 was awesome until 8/16 chips started selling for $300. Intel will charge $400 for 6/12 again. And yeah, until now they made me choose between IPC and more cores, so I'm a little bitter about that also.
That did it! Thank you!Up your voltage on the mesh to 1.1V, that'll be good for up to 3.2GHz on the 7900X and 7820X in my testing. 7800X silicon is too low quality to hit 3.2GHz from my experience.
Though, not unusual for them, AMD misses a marketing trick, again. :|Its a shame that AMD ReLive does not support CPU encoding with Ryzen cpus.
Well...that is disappointing.7700K@4.8
1080ti@2063
Ram 3200 14-14-14-34
Welp never mind, I can't figure out how to post images.
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Interesting that you want revenge on Intel but not on AMD which abandoned this market altogether for half-a-decade.Actually, making me choose between IPC and more cores has left me pretty enraged, not just bitter. I know they could have just cut the crap and given us 6/12 on the mainstream a long ass time ago, but nope. They had to milk every last drop out of those lower end HEDT chips and frustrate the customer with that hard choice between 4 faster cores or 6 slower ones. I want revenge for all this in the form of massively reduced margins and market share. I hope Zen 2 really rips their guts out.
You are sounding like AMD did it on purpose. They didn't have a platform to address it. That's not abandoning it. You can't squeeze blood from a turnip.not on AMD which abandoned this market altogether for half-a-decade
Wow dude, you sound like AMD will be taking away some of Intel's extra PR money from their "fund the wacko's" budget.Since it's inception, AMD has always never been much more than a money laundering front for insider trading of the executives and top shareholders of the company, so AMD finally dying would be best for consumers and hopefully fully unwind the ponzi scheme that is AMD.
Naw it wasnt intentional, just incompetence. That is OK I guess.You are sounding like AMD did it on purpose. They didn't have a platform to address it. That's not abandoning it. You can't squeeze blood from a turnip.
It's obviously been addressed now though.
Granted, not everyone has access to one, but for those that do, it is only 279.00 at microcenter.That's the 7700, the 7700K is $320.
https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117726&cm_re=7700k-_-19-117-726-_-Product
Off your meds again, I see.Since it's inception, AMD has always never been much more than a money laundering front for insider trading of the executives and top shareholders of the company, so AMD finally dying would be best for consumers and hopefully fully unwind the ponzi scheme that is AMD.
I think that's a charitable way to say that Intel has had the technology for years to give us more than 4 cores on the mainstream platform, but as the abusive monopolist they are, they chose to instead milk the market for profits, over the advancement of civilization.As for the Intel 6 core 12 thread mainstream line chips, it was blindingly obvious that they would come out eventually, since their sales have flatlined on their 4 core 8 thread chips due to them being nothing more than mobile chips that happen to also be used for the PC gaming market.
In the mid-2000s, one could legitimately paint them as a victim.Off your meds again, I see.
Some of us more rational folk see AMD as a premier technology company, that has been hamstrung in the market by the unethical, and arguably outright illegal tactics of Intel.
Sure, AMD's incompetence for the last 5 years contributed to that, but it can't be denied 6C12T on the mainstream socket could've happened MUCH earlier.I think that's a charitable way to say that Intel has had the technology for years to give us more than 4 cores on the mainstream platform, but as the abusive monopolist they are, they chose to instead milk the market for profits, over the advancement of civilization.
You do realize that Intel's tactics constricted AMD's R&D pipeline, so BD is the best that they could come up with at the time.In the mid-2000s, one could legitimately paint them as a victim.
But once Bulldozer rolled around, they sowed their own animosity towards them.
AMD has had their comeuppance, and then some. Anyone who wanted them to suffer got exactly that. They lost quite a bit of talent, suffered massive financial losses, and ruined their reputation with many.Interesting that you want revenge on Intel but not on AMD which abandoned this market altogether for half-a-decade.
Wow, that's up there with Nosta's claim that Keller stole tech from Apple and somehow got away with it. Feel free to present evidence supporting your claims, but until you do that . . . please stop.The only way that the "viral marketers" will go away is if interest rates for AMD rolling over it's debt rise substantially and for a long period of time forcing them to liquidate their "viral marketing" budget.
Intel played their dirtiest when chasing Athlon XP; the lawsuit AMD filed was in 2005. But they were also developing products as well as playing the strongarm bully. But without a competitive product, they never would have came back even with all of those supply-side tactics. Once Conroe hit the market, they were well on their way to reclaiming the crown, and AMD was chasing something they could have kept since Ruiz delayed development on the 65nm node at that critical juncture. There were still rolling in dough prior to Conroe and had the means to quickly jump to the next node, but Ruiz delayed, and Intel caught up and never looked back. Bulldozer was K8's successor, and by then, the tactical error and fallout was complete.You do realize that Intel's tactics constricted AMD's R&D pipeline, so BD is the best that they could come up with at the time.
I'm not saying that AMD hasn't had their own points of incompetence, and Bulldozer was a big part of that.