- Aug 26, 2014
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I'm (slowly but surely) planning a full system upgrade for my desktop. It's nearly 6 years old (CPU, motherboard and RAM, not GPU), but still performs admirably (I can play most games at 1440p with no issue).
My main reasons for upgrading:
-I want a smaller computer, i.e. mini ITX (or a very compact mATX).
-I want something more quiet/efficient
-Feature upgrades: m.2, USB 3.0 (3.1?)
My requirements:
-significantly higher performance than my current C2Q Q9450 (not really hard, but...)
-quiet operation (low/scaleable power usage)
-should last at least as long as my current setup has
Up until now, I've been very tempted by the i5 4690, running at stock or a slight UC for general usage, and loading an OC profile for gaming or other heavy usage. The improved TIM (and thus thermal performance) seems worth the step up from the 4590, even if I'm not going to OC all that much.
The rumours of unlocked desktop Broadwell at 65W TDP have of course piqued my interest, so I'm wondering if that would be worth waiting for. From my understanding, though, Broadwell doesn't really perform better than Haswell, but runs slightly cooler due to the newer process. Still, I've been told that 84W Haswell-K CPUs run at under 70W at stock.
Would this be worth the wait?
Also, if the rumours are true, Skylake-K on the desktop will be out this fall. This might bring smaller motherboards with USB 3.1 (considering only one or two ATX X99 models have this today), but other than that, what are the arguments for waiting?
DDR4 seems like a waste of money after reading the recent (excellent) memory scaling article here on AnandTech (what ordinary PC usage today is memory limited, any way?). I'm planning on starting out with 8GB of RAM after the upgrade, but if necessary I might of course double that in a few years (I've never seen my system use more than 6GB, and I don't make any effort what so ever to limit RAM usage) Considering DDR2 is still(!) available to a certain degree, I would think DDR3 should be readily available at least for a few years. Am I wrong here? As of now, DDR4 seems to cost about 33% more/GB - what are the chances of this dropping quickly?
Of course, there is speculation that Skylake will support both DDR3 and 4, but what are the chances of a feature-rich Z170-based ITX or mATX motherboard using DDR3?
The one big draw here seems to be the increase in PCIe lanes, making 4xPCIe Gen3 m.2 more viable on ITX (only Asus seems to have this today), even enabling two m.2 slots with a bit of creative PCB design.
Also, of course, I want the new build to be usable as long as possible, and Skylake, being newer, would (hopefully) score higher on longevity. However, Intel's CPU sockets in recent years have only lasted two generations, so that point is (nearly) made irrelevant as I won't be replacing my CPU for 3-4 years (if at all before the next platform upgrade).
What do you think? Should I wait, or should I buy the setup I have in mind as quickly as possible?
My main reasons for upgrading:
-I want a smaller computer, i.e. mini ITX (or a very compact mATX).
-I want something more quiet/efficient
-Feature upgrades: m.2, USB 3.0 (3.1?)
My requirements:
-significantly higher performance than my current C2Q Q9450 (not really hard, but...)
-quiet operation (low/scaleable power usage)
-should last at least as long as my current setup has
Up until now, I've been very tempted by the i5 4690, running at stock or a slight UC for general usage, and loading an OC profile for gaming or other heavy usage. The improved TIM (and thus thermal performance) seems worth the step up from the 4590, even if I'm not going to OC all that much.
The rumours of unlocked desktop Broadwell at 65W TDP have of course piqued my interest, so I'm wondering if that would be worth waiting for. From my understanding, though, Broadwell doesn't really perform better than Haswell, but runs slightly cooler due to the newer process. Still, I've been told that 84W Haswell-K CPUs run at under 70W at stock.
Would this be worth the wait?
Also, if the rumours are true, Skylake-K on the desktop will be out this fall. This might bring smaller motherboards with USB 3.1 (considering only one or two ATX X99 models have this today), but other than that, what are the arguments for waiting?
DDR4 seems like a waste of money after reading the recent (excellent) memory scaling article here on AnandTech (what ordinary PC usage today is memory limited, any way?). I'm planning on starting out with 8GB of RAM after the upgrade, but if necessary I might of course double that in a few years (I've never seen my system use more than 6GB, and I don't make any effort what so ever to limit RAM usage) Considering DDR2 is still(!) available to a certain degree, I would think DDR3 should be readily available at least for a few years. Am I wrong here? As of now, DDR4 seems to cost about 33% more/GB - what are the chances of this dropping quickly?
Of course, there is speculation that Skylake will support both DDR3 and 4, but what are the chances of a feature-rich Z170-based ITX or mATX motherboard using DDR3?
The one big draw here seems to be the increase in PCIe lanes, making 4xPCIe Gen3 m.2 more viable on ITX (only Asus seems to have this today), even enabling two m.2 slots with a bit of creative PCB design.
Also, of course, I want the new build to be usable as long as possible, and Skylake, being newer, would (hopefully) score higher on longevity. However, Intel's CPU sockets in recent years have only lasted two generations, so that point is (nearly) made irrelevant as I won't be replacing my CPU for 3-4 years (if at all before the next platform upgrade).
What do you think? Should I wait, or should I buy the setup I have in mind as quickly as possible?
