- Oct 9, 1999
- 4,954
- 3,387
- 136
With the release of Alder Lake less than a week away and the "Lakes" thread having turned into a nightmare to navigate I thought it might be a good time to start a discussion thread solely for Alder Lake.
But Thuban is not Bulldozer?I don't need to, he said that FX series (Bulldozer) was released in 2011, when X6 was on the market 18 months earlier.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenom_II#ThubanBut Thuban is not Bulldozer?
12900K is OOS NewEgg. The best boards are now as well. Corsair and G.Skill DDR5 is completely unavailable. Feels about right.Gotta say regardless of reviews I was expecting Alder Lake to be completely sold out. DIY demand must be really lousy given GPU prices.
Not if you take into account half the bottleneck testing he did. We're all not blind to the 'ways' of that guy. Anandtech did a 384p game testing in the Zen 3 review, iirc, where's that now? A cpu gaming test is not the same as a gpu gaming test.
Can I hear, "Thank you, Intel"?
R7 5800x = $299.99 is amazing.
R5 5600x = $279.99
Sorry but what is your point - AMD had 6 cores/threads CPUs before release of FX series.But Thuban is not Bulldozer?
In the HUB test suite about +2/3% because they are GPU limited on the averages.
Maybe the 1% lows will improve a lot though and that is where you can more easily see the impact of more CPU performance.
https://www.computerbase.de/2021-11/intel-core-i9-12900k-i7-12700k-i5-12600k-test/2/
12th gen was tested with the old 10th-gen, 11th gen scheme here (PL1 = 125w, PL2 = 150/190/241w, 56 sec), and even for a long load in Blender the 12900k only loses 12% perf, the 12700k loses 6% perf, and the 12600k loses no perf at all.
It'd be interesting to do more throuogh testing of the 12th gens with more stringent ~125w PL2s. For all intents and purposes the 12600k is already there by default and I suspect performance loss is not nearly as big on the i7s/i9s as implied by the power draw.
I7 12700KF review from Hardware Unboxed:
12700K, crushes the 5800X, and the power usage is tamed as well.
While everyone is beating up on the 12900K for it's power usage, and I agree if I wanted 16 core performance to run 24/7, I would stick with a 5950x, for the power savings.
But the the 12700K, and 12600K (and likely all the lower end of the lineup) are looking fantastic.
12700K absolutely crushes the 5800X, while trading blows with 5900X.
12600K absolutely crushes the 5600X, while trading blows with 5800X.
And the power usage drops dramatically in these parts, making it essentially a non issue.
I gave you measured data for Skylake 4c/8t @ 2.9Ghz doing 24W package power in Prime95, which is as close to unrealistic workload as we get.Also, you mention facts but I have to ask did you examine your second paragraph?
um, itaniun was a server cpu and used a server motherboard. The only windows OS for it was a custom made win XP 64-bit version that had no relation to win XP x64.intel was the one that made a real pure 64 bit CPU and nobody wanted to make the effort to switch to it.
Intel also released a 6core CPU in 2010 to the desktop market. AMD FX line launched in 2011
Product Specifications
quick reference guide including specifications, features, pricing, compatibility, design documentation, ordering codes, spec codes and more.ark.intel.com
Is Gracemont using the same amount of L3 per core as Golden Cove? AFAIK it gets a slice per core complex. I was also playing game and not asking how big that 8+32 chip would be in terms of area.That analogy only works if we pretend caches are free and aren't part of CPU design.
5. Global supply issues making everything more expensive.What is the reason of the expensive motherboard? In which order?
- PCIe5
- DDR5
- Increased power requirements?
- Increased socket pin out
For the folks who dont want to be part of the debate...
What is the reason of the expensive motherboard? In which order?
- PCIe5
- DDR5
- Increased power requirements?
- Increased socket pin out
Updated the question above, while what you say is true, it also applies to older gen boards.There's massive price increases globally on everything, from energy to packaging and transportation. Couple that with PCIe5 / DDR5 / power and you have the perfect storm.
I gave you measured data for Skylake 4c/8t @ 2.9Ghz doing 24W package power in Prime95, which is as close to unrealistic workload as we get.
Here's i7 8700 with HT disabled, running at 3.2Ghz in CB23.
The cores use around 37W. Do you need help extrapolating from 6 to 8 cores?
You sir, are wrong.Clocks don't change until this coming weekend FYI.
One thing I noticed.... You can only buy the 12600 and 12700 at newegg. Others OOS. Amazon has the 12900k for $1600!
Blah, but why use DDR4 3200mhz CL22 for test vs DDR5 4800mhz CL40? This is completely unnecessary, 3200mhz CL16 DDR4 memory is very cheep.
There is no need to help brutally overpriced DDR5 memory.
Agreed, gonna be a safe bet that Raptor Lake is the one to get. DDR5 5600, more E cores and improved cache for gaming ( whatever that means ) -> probably Intel is fixing some of deficiencies in memory subsystem.
It's pretty common for the top Intel CPUs to sell out first when they first launch.Wonder if yields are an issue on the 12900k?
Homey done playing the GPU pricing insanity game until (if ever) that GPU prices return to reasonable levels. I'm not dropping $1.5k+ on a video card.....ever.