Nobody needs more than 640K.
Right?
I think there should be a requirement on this board that anyone that makes a statement like "we don't need more cores" should be required to revisit that statement in 18 months when they are running a CPU with more cores than they are using today.
And they should not be allowed to complain about having "only" 8 cores in 24 months.
If you take a step back, logically, and look at the market, both AMD and intel are increasing core counts. That can mean only one of 2 things:
1. The future will be more multithreaded and software will be able to take advantage
2. Neither company, who spends hundreds of thousands of hours researching, talking to customers, talking to software vendors, studying trends and looking at technology, called it right.
I am putting all of my money on #1.
If you seriously believed that the future was not going to be more threaded than today, you'd build a bunch of single core processors and be done with it. You wouldn't spend tens of millions on R&D to get more cores into a processor unless you had a pretty clear understanding of how those cores were going to be used.
I guess a third option is that AMD is 100% wrong on this and intel is chasing AMD instead of paying attention to the needs of the market. But I tend to not believe that is even a viable choice.
Right?
I think there should be a requirement on this board that anyone that makes a statement like "we don't need more cores" should be required to revisit that statement in 18 months when they are running a CPU with more cores than they are using today.
And they should not be allowed to complain about having "only" 8 cores in 24 months.
If you take a step back, logically, and look at the market, both AMD and intel are increasing core counts. That can mean only one of 2 things:
1. The future will be more multithreaded and software will be able to take advantage
2. Neither company, who spends hundreds of thousands of hours researching, talking to customers, talking to software vendors, studying trends and looking at technology, called it right.
I am putting all of my money on #1.
If you seriously believed that the future was not going to be more threaded than today, you'd build a bunch of single core processors and be done with it. You wouldn't spend tens of millions on R&D to get more cores into a processor unless you had a pretty clear understanding of how those cores were going to be used.
I guess a third option is that AMD is 100% wrong on this and intel is chasing AMD instead of paying attention to the needs of the market. But I tend to not believe that is even a viable choice.
