- Jul 26, 2006
- 143
- 2
- 81
I got an i7 970, its 45nm, 4 cores @ 2.8Ghz for ~$400. I have wanted to upgrade for a while, but it seems each generation Intel disappoints, forcing me to wait another year/generation until I can upgrade...
Broadwell and skylake are both 14nm (3.2 times smaller then 45nm). So in a *PERFECT* world with *PERFECT* scaling, we would have a 12 core CPU at 3GHZ for about $400....
Since we don't live in this perfect world, why are we so far behind? Why is an 8 core CPU (5960X) at 3GHZ cost over $1000?
If you compare the perfect world scenario as 100% scaling, to what we have, we today are at about 26% of a potential 100% scaling (when you factor core count and price).
What is going on? Why is Intel so far behind its potential hypothetical maximum numbers? We had quad cores at 65nm in 2006, yet almost a decade later with over 4x transistor shrink we are looking at over $1000 for an 8 core CPU?
Broadwell and skylake are both 14nm (3.2 times smaller then 45nm). So in a *PERFECT* world with *PERFECT* scaling, we would have a 12 core CPU at 3GHZ for about $400....
Since we don't live in this perfect world, why are we so far behind? Why is an 8 core CPU (5960X) at 3GHZ cost over $1000?
If you compare the perfect world scenario as 100% scaling, to what we have, we today are at about 26% of a potential 100% scaling (when you factor core count and price).
What is going on? Why is Intel so far behind its potential hypothetical maximum numbers? We had quad cores at 65nm in 2006, yet almost a decade later with over 4x transistor shrink we are looking at over $1000 for an 8 core CPU?