Dadofamunky
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- Jan 4, 2005
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Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: Dadofamunky
Good grief. One-tenth of one percent will effectively use 12 GB. (Rough guess.) I'm sure I never come close to pushing my 8 GB setup, I just did it cause it was cheap... Also, my guess is that this launch will be minimum 4 cores, with 8 cores being a primary push. The software jocks are buried, we don't even use what we have now for any mainstream stuff. If I'm right, it's as though you'd be building an enterprise server as your main home desktop. Vista? XP? Forget it. What's the point? Windows 2008 Server? Fedora Core 9? Probably...
It looks like their new architecture kicks, so I'll be looking to possibly do a new build in a year or two. But I'm beginning to wonder jsut how successful this launch is going to be. Talk about overkill! Yeah, it'd be the biggest e-penis on the block for months, but Intel seems to typically release their high-end parts first and to target the enterprise/server markets initially with this type of release, as I'm sure everybody knows. I know for sure I won't get one. There's no need, what I have is MORE than good enough. Not that there's anything wrong with doing so if you've got the scratch...
I'm guessing the percentage of desktop consumers who would need 12GB is probably about the same as the percentage of desktop consumers who would need 8 threads on Nehalem running at 3.2Ghz or faster.
Same percentage with tri-SLI...
Yeah, the video cards seem to be the one segment that seems to be stubbornly price-insensitive. It is funny though, we're all mentioning how expensive DDR3 still is, but it IS already starting to drop. In a few years or so my guess is the stuff we'll have on our desk will put our current hot rods to shame and be stunningly cheaper, at least per MIP. Hopefully SSDs will continue to drop and will get design refinements that eliminate the large-transfer bottlenecks they still have.
The killer app hasn't yet come along that would enable masses of people to really take advantage of all that power, though. We all have stuff now that is as powerful as the entire Houston Space Center in the early 70's, yet we spend entire CPU cores doing nothing...