In theory, Broadwell (the die shrinked Haswell) is expected to come out in Socket 1150, in about 12 .. 18 months. But if it was me, I would wait until Broadwell comes out, to give 1150 motherboards time to improve, cost reduce, and also there may be better 1150 chipsets out by then.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadwell_(microarchitecture)
In theory, Broadwell (the die shrinked Haswell) is expected to come out in Socket 1150, in about 12 .. 18 months. But if it was me, I would wait until Broadwell comes out, to give 1150 motherboards time to improve, cost reduce, and also there may be better 1150 chipsets out by then.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadwell_(microarchitecture)
ummm you got a point, I was thinking about getting haswell for next upgrade, but this whole soso performance, less OC than Ivy kinda turned me off. but if Broadwell gonna be release on it may be there's still some hope for 1150.
In theory, Broadwell (the die shrinked Haswell) is expected to come out in Socket 1150, in about 12 .. 18 months. But if it was me, I would wait until Broadwell comes out, to give 1150 motherboards time to improve, cost reduce, and also there may be better 1150 chipsets out by then.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadwell_(microarchitecture)
And then when you wait for Broadwell, in 12-18 months, people will then tell you just to wait for Skylake. It is a never ending process.
And while you wait, we will be enjoying our Haswells for 12-24 months.
And then when you wait for Broadwell, in 12-18 months, people will then tell you just to wait for Skylake. It is a never ending process.
And while you wait, we will be enjoying our Haswells for 12-24 months.
yeah, if I had listened to those people that say "just wait," I'd still have my 486 running Win 3.1.
But, if you want the best motherboard to go with your shiny new cpu, it's best to buy the cpu and motherboard at the SAME time, which might make you decide to wait, rather than buying a motherboard in the hope of upgrading the cpu later.
On my server, I'm rocking an IB CPU on my Z68 MB from SB days. Didn't need a Z77 board.
I don't think Intel is keeping much close to it's chest here
In theory, Broadwell (the die shrinked Haswell) is expected to come out in Socket 1150, in about 12 .. 18 months. But if it was me, I would wait until Broadwell comes out, to give 1150 motherboards time to improve, cost reduce, and also there may be better 1150 chipsets out by then.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadwell_(microarchitecture)
Just about everything surrounding Broadwell suggests it's going to be a non desktop/BGA only part. Intel will likely release faster versions of Haswell, then move straight to Skylake for desktops.
Example, Intel seem to be keeping extremely tight lipped about the Haswell series, even though it has already been released.
Why are so many options disabled in the 4770K ?
Why does it still have a significantly worse TIM (or gap) compared to Sandy Bridge ?
Why have the maximum clock frequencies not gone up ? (lack of competition, poor 22nm yields, overheating, power consumption, or what ?) ?
Has the Haswell series experienced technical difficulties, and so is under-performing at the moment ?
If Intel are keeping people well informed, then I'm not 100% convinced.
My point wasn't that Intel was keeping people well informed. My point was that the writing is on the wall in traffic cone orange letters so big you have to be pretty slow not to realize what's going on.
They've never been very communicative with the enthusiast segment. Not directly anyway. Their actions over the last few years speak pretty loudly. Get your head out of the sand if you think they're planning on any favors to the enthusiast segment. It's a high margin segment that they've been squeezing for a few years. Don't expect them to stop squeezing now... there's still no real competition, so they're gonna squeeze tighter.
If so, I will be very disappointed. I was hoping that although Broadwell is not expected to be massively faster than Haswell, it should give a nice power saving advantage, for the same computing power, and have much better integrated graphics. (Much like Ivy bridges power savings over Sandy, due mainly to the die shrink).
