- Oct 9, 1999
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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.
Here is one with good DDR4, but no OC v. 3400G, if you did not see it already. It should be right there in some titles. Maybe win some that are CPU heavy? Drivers should help a little as time goes by. If Intel gives them any love that is.Has anyone run across a review or benchmarks of the uhd 770 igpu in Alder Lake with a heavy overclock with good ram? O'm wondering if it makes it to the roughly ryzen 3200g performance level?
We don't get a piece of flair to pin to our lapels for getting M1 performance from a non-Apple piece of hardware, whenever it shows up? Are you sure? How will everyone know how smart and value driven we are?
/S
I am not buying a Mac because I am Windows across all my things right now and I put a premium on having my tools be homogenous, but I am looking forward to getting something better than my 8th Gen i7 in a laptop and picking up some decent battery life too. It's not like it's too slow, really, but I am wanting something new and shiny and preferably without two GPUs (I don't like how hybrid stuff makes it hard to know what is going on or makes you choose performance vs battery life). Xe or RDNA2 in a Lenovo Thinkpad is how I will be rolling, no matter how shiny that M1 Air might be
Given how OEM relationships are working and how AMD is maybe (correctly, as a stockholder, imo) keeping their best for the datacenter it's looking like an Intel part right now. So lets go, Intel!
I'm also waiting to see how AMD responds with Zen 3D before I make my final upgrade decision.
Well it's the only thing you can do to improve performance without really doing anything, it's like putting an ssd into an old laptop, or to stay closer to how cache works like putting an optane disk in a system.I really like that AMD is pushing more cache everywhere.
I'm just saying it as it is, but the counter argument is also very strong: every DDR5 kit that's been produced for the client market is currently paired with an ADL-S cpu. That's a significant number for a processor that's not even a week old.Using this as part of your argument against "sales are bad" doesn't really help.
I contemplated creating an "Alder Lake - Builders Thread" to get those with the hardware talking about experiences with it. Ultimately passed on it knowing there would be undesirable (to put it politely) bleed over from this thread.
I too recommend we get a builder thread, especially considering some of the memebers may seek information about cooler compatibility. There are some ADL boards out there with holes for both LGA 1700 and LGA 1200 coolers, which may seem smart at first before one finds out about the ~1mm Z-height difference which will probably affect mounting pressure and may result in lower cooler performance.Do it Adam. Don't be daunted by any of that nonsense. If they start to off topic the build thread, report them, and it will get handled. Builder threads are not for versus flame wars, they are for help and advice.
As a moderator, I fully support a builder thread !!! Go for it. @AdamK47I too recommend we get a builder thread, especially considering some of the memebers may seek information about cooler compatibility. There are some ADL boards out there with holes for both LGA 1700 and LGA 1200 coolers, which may seem smart at first before one finds out about the ~1mm Z-height difference which will probably affect mounting pressure and may result in lower cooler performance.
I'm not sure if you're joking. If reddit is any indication, the only thing holding most people up from their builds are LGA 1700 retention kits and compatible coolers, and DDR5 stock. Those who went ahead and bought DDR5 already are up and running. An impatient bunch have turned to DDR4, and some are also playing the waiting game to see if there are going to be any bugs while weighing whether to go DDR4 or DDR5.
For the best I guess. Hardware Unboxed had a video suggesting Alder Lake's sales have been bad. Normally I would be skeptical cuz Youtubers but from what I'm seeing that looks correct. Only the i9 seems to have any demand and it's basically OOS.
But on the other hand it is not so much better than zen3 that it is a no brainer.
Probably the least yield/stock and most popular for those who want the latest and greatest as fast as possible. Builders who opts for a 12600k are probably also more likely to be a bit more relaxed regarding the timeframe buying one, would be my guess.That's weird. The 12900k seems like the least desirable Alder Lake-S part at its relative price point. 12600k has some solid use cases.
Yeah an i9 12900k 24t beating a 32t 5950x on MT and murdering it on ST while also costing less is ''not much better''
Yeah an i9 12900k 24t beating a 32t 5950x on MT and murdering it on ST while also costing less is ''not much better''
You don't know that, nobody does because nobody benchmarks that way, setting your bios to max power usage is incredibly inefficient, not a single review uses PBP/TDP settings for both performance benches as well as power draw numbers in the same suit, so we have no idea how much this difference really is. It is going to be better for ryzen in most things but not by as much as reviews make you think.If you run a workload that pushes the cores 100% for a long period of time some useres would consider the power draw as a deciding factor as well, and for that a 5950X beats the 12900K hands down.
You don't know that, nobody does because nobody benchmarks that way, setting your bios to max power usage is incredibly inefficient, not a single review uses PBP/TDP settings for both performance benches as well as power draw numbers in the same suit, so we have no idea how much this difference really is. It is going to be better for ryzen in most things but not by as much as reviews make you think.
Powerdraw gaming total system: (perf/watt is pretty much equal) with the 12900k being 7% faster average in the 10 games they tested.
5900x: 496W
5950x: 529W
12900k DDR5: 536W
Powerdraw Blender total system: (not so much)
5900x: 242W
5950x: 221W
12900k DDR5: 362W
Based on just these figures:
12900k gaming: Yay
12900k serious work: Nay
SOMETIMES it win s in MT, and its does beat it ST, and sucks a lot of power doing it, and is a furnace.Yeah an i9 12900k 24t beating a 32t 5950x on MT and murdering it on ST while also costing less is ''not much better''
If your "serious work" is a CPU render farm. Sure. But not all "serious work" is.
It seems like Intel should consider an all E-Core server chip for those kinds of loads.
good lord $320 for 3400G. is that the going price now?
I too recommend we get a builder thread, especially considering some of the memebers may seek information about cooler compatibility. There are some ADL boards out there with holes for both LGA 1700 and LGA 1200 coolers, which may seem smart at first before one finds out about the ~1mm Z-height difference which will probably affect mounting pressure and may result in lower cooler performance.
For the best I guess. Hardware Unboxed had a video suggesting Alder Lake's sales have been bad. Normally I would be skeptical cuz Youtubers but from what I'm seeing that looks correct. Only the i9 seems to have any demand and it's basically OOS.