Edrick
Golden Member
I've said it before, the whole idea of releasing mainstream and then much, much later releasing the high end, is an awful decision.
I agree 100% here. The Nehalam release was how I would expect it to be.
I've said it before, the whole idea of releasing mainstream and then much, much later releasing the high end, is an awful decision.
Weird logic here, blame the victim? I blame regulators who let Intel crush the x86 market and got a slap on their wrist with a 1G$ or so settlement. But hey, let's blame the company who desperately tries to compete with the behemoth that is Intel and having only one tenth of Intel's resources (probably less).
Spoken like a true socialist. Lets punish and fine a company for putting out a good product that is better than the competition. Intel was not always huge you realize. And they had a lot more competition in the 80s and 90s. They just happen to win (for various reasons). So the government should step in? I never understood this way of thinking. Punish the people who succeed to help out the people who don't.
AMD was on top for a few years during the P4 days, but they didn't improve upon that. They sat back and waited for Intel to counter. Goes to show even these "behemoth" companies also make mistakes. It is up to the smaller companies to capitalize on that.
Given how nonchalantly Intel seems in dealing with LGA2011 I doubt they even care about this platform.
yes any 2011 mobo should be able to take Ivy Bridge.
I think thats just the 1155 Ivy Bridge cpus coming out in 4 or 5 months though and 2011 versions will not be out until well after that. honestly I would just wait until Ivy Bridge comes out instead of going Sandy Bridge E.
nearly 4 years later and overclocked i7 920 users really do not have anything worthwhile to upgrade to.
This makes it harder to resist upgrading to a 2500K, for a gaming rig, ARRRGH
The Intel Core i7-3930K is actually not bad. For $555 you get better performance than a $1000 990X. So technically on the high-end, if you don't care for 'bragging rights', then an overclocked 3930K will still be very fast for less $. For gamers, definitely not worth it. But this is primarily a powerhouse/workstation platform for someone who actually needs a fast 6-core CPU. For that type of user, the $555 asking price isn't that bad. This power user might be running raided PCIe SSDs, and 2-3 high-end GPUs, in which case the PCIe lanes on the 1155 may be insufficient.
I think the most disappointment part here is that Intel should have released LGA2011 in January of 2011 along-side with the 1155 socket. Being almost 1 year late is disappointing. 3820 delayed until February? Well, there is literally no point to that CPU given that IVB will be out very soon from that point.
Sigh, when will people learn to stop bitching about power consumption..ON A PERFORMANCE RIG.
Do you drive a Porsche and complain that the engine is to big?
Well this is a let down..
I've been wanting to upgrade my i7-930. It actually bottlenecks my 3x580s in BF3 and I can't get it stable over 4.2GHz.
Tempted to go for a 2700K now...
Well after reading "3-way SLI is up to 29% faster", I don't think I can pass...
I mean, how can I spend $1700 on video cards and not use them at their maximum potential.
I see what you did there ...
Why stop at video cards? Why not take a 2700K and overclock it to 10ghz too to 'simulate' next generation CPUs too! And then, take some duct tape and tape a few more PCIx slots to the motherboard too to simulate next generation motherboards!
Yes, because what Intel is doing with the "-E" line is stupid. You can't release the high end so late in the product cycle. The high end previously came first, and if these had come out with the normal SB, the price premium would not make so many people balk. We've always paid a premium for the top end, but when the top end will likely be matched or bettered very soon, for so little in comparison, why buy it?
I've said it before, the whole idea of releasing mainstream and then much, much later releasing the high end, is an awful decision.
Competitive in performance, but if we can wait 6 months and get the same performance for 1/3 of the price, buying SB-E is silly.
It all goes back to depending on the workload. There comes a point that unless the computing paradigm changes, buying more cores is kind of silly except in specific apps. I'd much rather scale clock speed than cores count at the 4 core + HT level. You *should* be able to scale clock speed on the next gen appreciably higher than you can on the SB-E. It's obviously not out, so we are obviously just guessing, but theoretically that's how it should work.
I doubt 4 IB cores will match 6 SB-E cores in performance.
You are right, for most people having 4 faster cores is better than 6 slightly slower ones. And in that case IB makes sense. But those are the same people who would never bother with SB-E in the first place. The people who need SB-E, will buy SB-E regardless of when the mainstream IB comes out. Also, IB-E should not be delayed as long as SB-E was, so the X79 platform will have upgrade options in 2012 as well.