926 MB is far off from its 1.7 GB limit.
926/4043, it means 926MB used of 4043MB avalible.
926 MB is far off from its 1.7 GB limit.
There are also Y model laptops. Specially with the benefit of being fanless, which I like. However I don't like it to the point of the performance being too severely impacted. So I'd like to see some reviews of Skylake Y. But it's a worrying sign that some OEM models like Lenovo Yoga have moved from Y to U for Skylake.
But it's a worrying sign that some OEM models like Lenovo Yoga have moved from Y to U for Skylake.
But enough to make the U series fanless in laptops?You forget U models got much improved power usage. See Anandtech on the Surface.
Why? Its still race to sleep, it just means that if you're gonna put it under load, it wont throttle and burn up your battery faster... thus u better be plugged in if you're going to do some heavy gaming. I like it.
926/4043, it means 926MB used of 4043MB avalible.
Well, with the U series, the laptop will turn on the fan if under heavy load (and also sometimes even when not under heavy continuous load I've heard). Hence not fanless.
The laptop I intend to get will mostly be used for web surfing, reading emails, and other light work with only short busty heavy loads. So I figured Skylake Y might be an option, with the benefit of being fanless, and thus a bit smaller and lighter too.
This is a misread, Haswell is limited to max 1.7 GB.
I think fanless is more or less the only benefit with the Y series in laptops. But to some that is a highly desirable feature. If you don't care about that, then there is not much reason to chose it. It could have been priced lower if price was set based on performance, but it isn't:Ok sure, thats a point.. but between all the other aspects, metrics, of such a purchase(laptop), fan/fanless etc would be way down my priority list.
(example, the surface pro 4 looks really good in this context.. with fan too)
I think fanless is more or less the only benefit with the Y series in laptops. But to some that is a highly desirable feature. If you don't care about that, then there is not much reason to chose it. It could have been priced lower if price was set based on performance, but it isn't:
6Y57: 1.1/2.8GHz, Price $281
6Y75: 1.2/3.1GHz, Price $393
So the Y series is very expensive for the performance you get.
Those prices are pretty out of touch with reality. No OEM is paying anything close to those amounts.
I thought Skylake has unlocked bclk? Where are the bclk non-k overclocks?
Well that settles that that. No true overclocker can stand this bullshit from Intel. It's x58 for me till AMD gets something reasonable out there.It's disabled afaik on non-K. There's no multicore enhancement either, all you can do is raise the bclk to 103 Mhz or so. You wanna overclock, you gotta pay.
I think fanless is more or less the only benefit with the Y series in laptops. But to some that is a highly desirable feature. If you don't care about that, then there is not much reason to chose it. It could have been priced lower if price was set based on performance, but it isn't:
6Y57: 1.1/2.8GHz, Price $281
6Y75: 1.2/3.1GHz, Price $393
So the Y series is very expensive for the performance you get.
But i DO remember the 1700mb limit in the past, if it says that its because the driver is reporting that much, if im bored i may try to fill the vram to see what happens.
Hi all. As I see Caby Lake is just refresh for Skylake and Cannonlake is Caby Lake shrink to 10nm node. It means we will not see any significant IPC increase with both of them.
As a result, it seems Skylake should be very competitive during next 3-4 years. But as I see from different reviews, Skylake didn't bring significant increase in games comparing to Haswell. Does it mean I can save some money buying unlocked Haswell with DDR3 instead of Skylake and forget about upgrade for games for next 3-4 years?
With fast ram, skylake seems to be about 10 to 15 % faster than Haswell in CPU bound games. If you have ddr3 ram to re-use then haswell is probably the best deal. If you are buying new ram, I would just go with skylake.
Interesting, I'll look for relevant tests. What about 2011-3 platform then? If choosing between 5820K and 6700K? Price difference is not big, and it gives 4-channel RAM, 6 cores but slightly lower overclocking potential.
when can we expect benchmarks on the 540 iris?
Additionally, we benched the i3 6100 twice, first of all using the full 2666MHz bandwidth of our Corsair Vengeance DDR4 modules, and then paring that back to 2133MHz in order to match the memory restrictions on the H170, B150 and H110 motherboards more likely to be utilised for budget builds. And as the benchmarks came in, the results were fascinating - in many CPU-bound scenarios, the i3 6100 is significantly faster with higher-speed RAM.
The two i3 runs are probably the more fascinating comparison in the table above. Consider the difference that 2666MHz memory makes to performance. That Ryse figure is no error - performance falls through the floor when running with lower levels of bandwidth, while faster RAM offers 11 per cent more performance on GTA 5 and Far Cry 4. And again, those figures are averages spread out across the benchmark run - it's noticeably higher at any given point during 'in the moment' gameplay.
We are hearing rumours that some H170 boards may unofficially support memory overclocking too, which could save some money if true. On top of that, 2133MHz RAM is the absolute baseline - hunt around for 2666MHz sticks.
It's worth repeating that clock speeds are not like-for-like, but we are seeing improvements north of 20 per cent between Skylake and Haswell here, and it's actually the case that (CryEngine apart) a Core i3 6100 with 2666MHz DDR4 is generally on par or even a little faster than an older Core i5 2500K with 1333MHz DDR3 when both systems are paired with a GTX 970. The same set-up also sees Skylake beat the AMD FX-8350 (paired with 1600MHz DDR3) in every game we tested bar Crysis 3 and The Witcher 3. Of course, those chips beg to be overclocked in a way that the i3 never can, but the bottom line is that in many gaming scenarios, the new i3 is capable of performance that belies its dual-core status.
The Skylake Core i3 6100 is an accomplished product bearing in mind its price-tag, and in conclusion, it's worth emphasising just how important performance is at this end of the market. High-end games are becoming more CPU-intensive, making it much more likely that the processor will be the bottleneck during any given gaming session - especially so at the budget end of the market. Every cycle matters in the more demanding areas of many modern titles, and in our testing, the Core i3 6100 is best in class.