I think that's certainly an option. I suppose the only concern at that point is the speed of those upcoming chips. If they're server chips it again leaves some users with a tradeoff they might not like.
Well, at the risk of being annoying, your last sentence is quite adversarial. It makes me think that regardless of what I say - unless it's an unequivocally pro-AMD/it'sthebestestintheuniversenoexceptions post - you'll ignore it.
But to answer you: If what you state above gives a user more performance for equal or less money then of course that's an interesting possibility. Part of my argument is that these users don't like change because it's not worth bothering with a new platform and possible issues (that's a 'perception thing'), and part of it is that some of their other concerns are legitimate, lane-count impacting connectivity and the amount of GPUs etc being examples.
At the end of the day I still maintain that Intel's high end HEDT chips aren't obsolete or dead. Anyone can feel free to show the numbers of how that's the case. A year from now? That's a different issue.
Unfortunately the minute AMD introduced their 8/16 chips, Intels 8/16 was dead in the water, the platform also is dead in the water, the amount you need to invest into the X99 platform, which is about to become obsolete due to being superseded by Intels next cash cow platform.
If as you are saying you are looking at it from a purely non gaming scenario, as a workstation type of platform, then the savings on the AMD platform will entice far more people to adopt, say for instance a typical Intel x99 6900k build costs £3000, the equivalent AMD 8/16 will be around £2500, even if the AMD platform only offers 90% of the performance its 75% of the cost. That right there will sway alot of people away from the Intel platform, then you add in that the AMD socket will allow you to discard the CPU in the future for a better perfoming one, where as with the Intel your pretty much at a dead end and need to swap the entire rig out etc.
Then add in the savings you get with the AMD platform, you go and put that £500 towards a professional M series AMD GPU with SSD bolted on it, that alone pretty much pays for itself with regards to the performance you achieve, especially in the types of tasks you are talking about.
Fact is, Intels X99 platform was massively overpriced, AMD have shown this to be true, now many X99 owners are trying to justify their overpriced purchases on many forums like this, by continually grasping at differing straws each time their current straw is disproved.
Soon you will be strawless, stuck on a dead platform and have no one left but an echo chamber to complain to my friend.
My advice? quietly exit through the side door while you still have a modicum of respect and integrity left before you totally lose that too.