What? Last time I checked 4770K costs about 350$ in retail.
http://ark.intel.com/products/75123/
Then again I don't think it can hang with Intel's best unless you limit the number of threads to 4, in such a scenario it's going to be the fastest CPU out there even.
i'm obviously talking about a 4670k. and for most enthusiast workloads *cough*games*cough*, it's just peachy. esp. when overclocked.
you might say, well, enthusiasts have different workloads like encoding. well and good, but overclocking isn't going to overcome the advantage that a quad (even a locked quad) inherently has in that type of workload. now, granted, the quads aren't as cheap as the duals. but that's not artificial market segmentation by playing with the engineering.
It is not a bad price, but I think Intel could do better by opening the enthusiast level to the lower chips as well.
These days I think it is fair to say many people consider full power desktops (even if they are only dual core) a luxury item. My guess is that the average person will probably spend money on a smartphone and some kind of dual core laptop. After these dollars are spent it is probably a toss up between a Tablet and a Desktop...if they even buy anything additional at all.
the people buying cheapy dual core laptops at walmart don't know what overclocking is and don't care about it. their laptop does everything they want for $500. in a nice portable form factor.
if you really want intel to do better you'd create some application that everyone wants and that a 6 year old core2 doesn't offer *good enough* performance in.
Budget enthusiast is the person who buys a $100 CPU and would like to OC it. How is that not on topic?
how much of an enthusiast are you if you're not eating ramen to get the processor you really want? :hmm:
again, paying ~$100 extra to get an unlocked part (even less as the cheapest quad is $190 on newegg) isn't dining on caviar.
that's my real beef with your assertion. i have an unlocked quad. i'm not a member of the mercedes driving jet set.
(hey, a 300A cost $149 in 1998, that's ~$210 today.)