Now that 2016 is here, the countdown can begin for when we bypass all of this Broadwell and Zen nonsense and get to the only CPU that actually matters: Skylake-E. I'll see you back here with my 8 Skylake cores @ 4.8Ghz. Benchmarks to soon follow.
2016=Broadwell-E Club.
2016 is the year to close our eyes and wait for the crappy tech to pass. Skylake-E is the only CPU available and it snot yet available.
Interested to see how a Broadwell-E 10 core stacks up to a 5960x.
2016 is the year to close our eyes and wait for the crappy tech to pass. Skylake-E is the only CPU available and it snot yet available.
Interested to see how a Broadwell-E 10 core stacks up to a 5960x.
I don't understand. There are users, like me, waiting to build or upgrade a system around a new Broadwell-E CPU. It is not yet available. Skylake-E is also not yet available and will necessarily come after. Yet you're saying that Skylake-E is both available and not yet available...?
I agree, 2016 will be one of my cheapest years I can remember.
With a 6700K, I'm afraid you will have nothing exciting to upgrade to for a very, VERY long time unless you just want more cores. That chip will last for pretty much ever. For damn ever. Like, Xbox twenty/PS 23 era forever. Like humans evolved a third arm era forever. Like earth looks like mars era forever.
I agree, 2016 will be one of my cheapest years I can remember.
Only 8 cores? What a n00b. I already have 36 cores with my 2x Xeon E5-2699v4 machine. I use it for Facebook mostly.
GPU wise is turning out to be the same. Next 14/16nm GPU will most likely last 5 years+.
Else the only thing to look forward to in the future is 3DXpoint. But Its not something I need anytime soon. Same with NVME.
Only server keeps running at full speed and accelerating.
Now that 2016 is here, the countdown can begin for when we bypass all of this Broadwell and Zen nonsense and get to the only CPU that actually matters: Skylake-E. I'll see you back here with my 8 Skylake cores @ 4.8Ghz. Benchmarks to soon follow.
Agreed Carfax. I can wait it out though. I like big jumps during upgrade time, but X99 is going to be solid for a long LONG time.
For an enthusiast/gamer not already on X99, Skylake-E is the only chip coming out in the next half decade that means anything. Everything else is blah blah, old news, quad core, boring, herp as well as derp, or ZEN and well...Have fun with that one.
. Benchmarks to soon follow.
Only 8 cores? What a n00b. I already have 36 cores with my 2x Xeon E5-2699v4 machine. I use it for Facebook mostly.
Now that 2016 is here, the countdown can begin for when we bypass all of this Broadwell and Zen nonsense and get to the only CPU that actually matters: Skylake-E. I'll see you back here with my 8 Skylake cores @ 4.8Ghz. Benchmarks to soon follow.
2016 is the year to close our eyes and wait for the crappy tech to pass. Skylake-E is the only CPU available and it snot yet available.
I don't understand. There are users, like me, waiting to build or upgrade a system around a new Broadwell-E CPU. It is not yet available. Skylake-E is also not yet available and will necessarily come after. Yet you're saying that Skylake-E is both available and not yet available...?
Wow, that's A LOT of trash talking alright. Let's break it down.
1. We know very little about Zen's real world performance to call it nonsense.
2. Claiming that Broadwell-E is nonsense and crappy tech, but hyping up Skylake-E that may only launch Q2 2017 is odd to me considering how little IPC Skylake has over Broadwell.
Sandy Bridge to Ivy Bridge: Average ~5.8% Up
Ivy Bridge to Haswell: Average ~11.2% Up
Haswell to Broadwell: Average ~3.3% Up
Broadwell to Skylake (DDR3): Average ~2.4% Up
Broadwell to Skylake (DDR4): Average ~2.7% Up
^ That's very unremarkable compared to BW to be calling BW-E crappy tech.
Another source confirms that Skylake's IPC over BW is a very small improvement:
![]()
The worst part about Skylake-E is that when it launches Skylake/i7 6700K architecture will be nearly 2 years old and we will be about a year away from Icelake based on current road-maps. That means in the context of 5820K vs. 6700K and 6800K-6950X vs. 6700K, Skylake-E actually looks the worst. We have to wait another full year from BW-E and almost 3 years from 5820K to get the measly IPC increase of SLK in SLK-E form.
Now if 8-core SLK-E drops to $399-449, that would be another story, but otherwise I don't see how the hype for an 8-core SLK-E is somehow justified. Besides, 8-cores do not even help in games. What happens in 2018 if Intel releases 6-core Icelake i7 on the mainstream platform? All of a sudden the 8-core 2017 SLK-E wouldn't look so great. So I wouldn't be so confident in declaring SLK-E as some amazing value just yet. It may be but we'll have to see by the time we get closer to 2017.
Don't worry, you'll have the last laugh in 2016. I remember the hype behind $699 780Ti and 10 months later that card turned into overpriced, under-performing turd. Once NV shifts its optimization resources to Pascal, even a GP104 Pascal will beat 980Ti for less $. Also, if you need a new build, there is no point at all waiting another year for SLK-E because it's not as if BW-E will be slow or something.
RS, good points, but there are some things to consider about SKL-E:
1. It will come w/ 48 PCIe lanes, which should be attractive for those who need to have full x16/x16/x16 for their tri-Pascal/Polaris GPU setups![]()
2. The PCH is much improved too (Kaby Lake PCH), with lots of nice PCIe 3.0 lanes for NVMe SSDs.
3. Should come with enhanced DDR4 memory speed support (DDR4-2666 official)
4. Will use an enhanced version of the Skylake core aimed at servers which Intel architects have hinted will have a lot more to them than the consumer-grade Skylake will have.
I think SKL-E is going to be awesome![]()
Wow, that's A LOT of trash talking alright. Let's break it down.
1. We know very little about Zen's real world performance to call it nonsense.
2. Claiming that Broadwell-E is nonsense and crappy tech, but hyping up Skylake-E that may only launch Q2 2017 is odd to me considering how little IPC Skylake has over Broadwell.
Per AT:
Sandy Bridge to Ivy Bridge: Average ~5.8% Up
Ivy Bridge to Haswell: Average ~11.2% Up
Haswell to Broadwell: Average ~3.3% Up
Broadwell to Skylake (DDR3): Average ~2.4% Up
Broadwell to Skylake (DDR4): Average ~2.7% Up
^ That's very unremarkable compared to BW to be calling BW-E crappy tech.
Another source confirms that Skylake's IPC over BW is a very small improvement:
![]()
The worst part about Skylake-E is that when it launches Skylake/i7 6700K architecture will be nearly 2 years old and we will be about a year away from Icelake based on current road-maps. That means in the context of 5820K vs. 6700K and 6800K-6950X vs. 6700K, Skylake-E actually looks the worst. We have to wait another full year from BW-E and almost 3 years from 5820K to get the measly IPC increase of SLK in SLK-E form.
Now if 8-core SLK-E drops to $399-449, that would be another story, but otherwise I don't see how the hype for an 8-core SLK-E is somehow justified. Besides, 8-cores do not even help in games. What happens in 2018 if Intel releases 6-core Icelake i7 on the mainstream platform? All of a sudden the 8-core 2017 SLK-E wouldn't look so great. So I wouldn't be so confident in declaring SLK-E as some amazing value just yet. It may be but we'll have to see by the time we get closer to 2017.
Don't worry, you'll have the last laugh in 2016. I remember the hype behind $699 780Ti and 10 months later that card turned into overpriced, under-performing turd. Once NV shifts its optimization resources to Pascal, even a GP104 Pascal will beat 980Ti for less $. Also, if you need a new build, there is no point at all waiting another year for SLK-E because it's not as if BW-E will be slow or something.
If Nvidia neglects Maxwell like they did with Kepler, I am switching over to AMD, monitor and all. That's all there is too it. The idea of an entire architecture being neglected so badly makes me sick. I can't buy a product like that. After what happened with Kepler, I am very sensitive to this and will be watching very closely. Its not just about the 980ti's. Its about choosing what kind of GPU company I want to support. It won't be NVidia if they do this again.