Phynaz
Lifer
- Mar 13, 2006
- 10,140
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I mean CPU thermals obviously. And they only care about system thermals because of laptops and tablets.
No.
I mean CPU thermals obviously. And they only care about system thermals because of laptops and tablets.
Sure, Intel can make a 65 W 14 nm node shrink "copy" of the 4770K with some more & redesigned EUs and 30% increased iGPU performance perhaps.
But really, most people sitting on a SB 2500K or later has no reason to upgrade to that. If they want to give those people a reason to upgrade they'll have to provide something more than that, like 6 CPU cores and/or a seriously beefed up iGPU / eDRAM. And such a change would likely require around 95 W TDP as in the OP slides, despite the node shrink to 14 nm.
Then they can have low power BGA Broadwell CPUs for the mainstream AIO PC desktop PCs and similar.
Since the desktop plans for Broadwell has shifted back and forth from LGA, to BGA only, and now back to LGA (and BGA), it looks like Intel has been reconsidering their plans a couple of times. So I guess anything is possible.
But it doesn't make sense for Intel to offer six cores on standard desktop when they can make themselves and their partners a whole lot more money on the HEDT platform.
The margins may be higher on the HEDT platform, but the volumes are also much less. So the total profit from that platform may not be as much.
If they can increase desktop sales by e.g. 20% by delivering a 6 core Broadwell-K, then they may make more total profit from that, despite the profit margin being lower per unit sold.
You are not getting a 6 core Broadwell-K, because it wouldnt sell in a volume needed.
How do you know that? And how do you know what volumes are would be needed, and that a 6 core Broadwell-K would not sell at those volumes?
Also, any reason a Broadwell-K that you are expecting, which basically is a copy of a 4770K but with better iGPU, would sell better? The HD4600 iGPU is already good enough for most people, and the rest will buy a discrete GFX card anyway. I.e. no reason to upgrade from a 2500K or later for most people.
With a 6 core CPU it would be something else. Especially since we're now entering a next-gen gaming era with the PS4/XBONE making use of 6/8 cores.
You are not getting a 6/8 core mainstream. Nomatter how many threads you keep making about it.
You need to buy the platform for it if you want one.
You can just buy IB-E today if you want 6 cores, or Haswell-E next year if you want 8 cores.
By that splendid logic we should have 8 core IBs on LGA1155. Since there is no product, then there is no market big enough to substain it outside the Xeon reuse. Aka E series.
I don't know about the reality of a 6 core mainstream part but I do know a 6 core mainstream Broadwell would be pretty much be the only thing that would make me upgrade my system instantly. Assuming I can get the chip for <$300.
What about Haswell-E? Hopefully the 6 core part will get a little cheaper with that.
I don't know about the reality of a 6 core mainstream part but I do know a 6 core mainstream Broadwell would be pretty much be the only thing that would make me upgrade my system instantly. Assuming I can get the chip for <$300.
Like ShintaiDK said, we have 6 core HEDT part because of Xeons. Maybe by Skymont, with the development of more thread heavy games (driven in part by X One and PS4).
Like ShintaiDK said, we have 6 core HEDT part because of Xeons. Maybe by Skymont, with the development of more thread heavy games (driven in part by X One and PS4) Intel might find it's time to had a top DT part w/6 cores - we'll just have to see. Since Skymont is supposed to be 10nm and some version of BGA mounting (non-upgradable), that also might incline Intel to offer a slightly higher end offering, then again, maybe not since they might prefer a higher churn rate instead).
Consoles are irrelevant because even a current dual-core haswell with HT can match the console CPUs in terms of CPU performance, even with 8 threads.
While I do laugh every time I see someone call Skylake's successor Skymont such is incorrect - it's Cannonlake. If I recall correctly, the only reference to Skymont was a 'roadmap' that someone made up which also had an outdated code name for Broadwell. It never made sense to me that everyone latched onto it either when the *mont naming is quite clearly reserved for the atom line (Silvermont, Airmont, Goldmont.)
Not when a given console game is scaled up properly. Of course, many are not, but the good ones are and then they bottleneck a PC just as much as they console.
Wouldn't that be nice? As with LGA-2011, I have a feeling that its the platform itself that will be relatively expensive. Not the CPU itself. Quad channel DDR4 sounds relatively expensive.
Oh, well. Wasn't really planning on upgrading before Skylake, but if the X99 platform is good I can always change my mind.
X79 motherboards don't actually seem as insanely priced as I'd feared. The cheapest one I've seen is a Biostar one, which is fairly reasonably priced. http://www.ebuyer.com/341239-biosta...11-8-channel-audio-atx-motherboard-tpower-x79 Yes, DDR4 may prove to be pretty expensive- but on the other hand, you're getting DDR4!
Hasn't it been the case for the last few generations of new ram types, that the first release of a new generation shows very little, if any, overall improvement to total system performance?
Whether that is because they start with modest ram speeds or the first memory controllers for the new generation of ram are far from optimal?
X79 motherboards don't actually seem as insanely priced as I'd feared. The cheapest one I've seen is a Biostar one, which is fairly reasonably priced. http://www.ebuyer.com/341239-biosta...11-8-channel-audio-atx-motherboard-tpower-x79 Yes, DDR4 may prove to be pretty expensive- but on the other hand, you're getting DDR4!
Yeah, DDR4 latencies will be higher, IIRC, than DDR3 2133. From what I've read it won't be till sometime in 2015 that faster speed are available - but that will be a mixed bag. One the one hand, DDR4 2133 will be more affordable, maybe even the same cost as DDR3 depending on how the RAM market is doing, but the faster speeds will come at a a steep premium.
