BurnItDwn
Lifer
- Oct 10, 1999
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cam on ban da chia se iliked
Google says this translates to "thank you for sharing, I liked" from Vietnamese
cam on ban da chia se iliked
DigiTimes originally said October for Summit Ridge, IIRC.
I literally don't know what an "infield single" is.
It's a baseball reference. Home runs = points for your team. It takes 4 "singles" to = a home run.
Core 2 duo and Sandybridge were phenomenal CPU's, therefore "home runs"
Skylake isn't that great, therefore a "single"
i don't get amd.
i really don't.
if zen is so great why not get it out as fast as possible?
an ace up your sleeve doesn't mean anything when the game is over.
I'm interpreting this correctly? Both Intel and AMD will be ready in 2016 but are withholding Zen and Kylake to help vendors with excessive inventory of existing Intel products. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't just release it anyways for the DIY crowd.
Appreciate the explanation, thanks.
I disagree with that characterization re: Skylake. SNB perf/clock was about 15% better than NHM, about what we got from HSW -> SKL.
I searched with Bing and found nothing. Only relative link is from you and this thread.
Not sure skylake is 15% faster than Haswell. In any case, Sandy brought a clockspeed increase and phenomenal overclocking as well, so there is more to the improvement than simply IPC.
I see Q4 2016 for KBL, so the part is news.We already have a roadmap leak showing KBL-X in Q2 2017, so that part isn't news.
I see Q4 2016 for KBL, so the part is news.
Not sure skylake is 15% faster than Haswell. In any case, Sandy brought a clockspeed increase and phenomenal overclocking as well, so there is more to the improvement than simply IPC.
I think it's when your girlfriend breaks up with you at a music festival.
Simple question to OP: why thread title doesn't include Kaby Lake too if those rumors are of course correct?
i don't get amd.
i really don't.
if zen is so great why not get it out as fast as possible?
an ace up your sleeve doesn't mean anything when the game is over.
Well as an owner of a 4790K and 6700K -- it's usually a draw in nearly everything. Under just about every game, there is very little difference in performance
But in the here and now, the Core i5 6600K is a strong product - at worst it provides mildly enhanced performance over its predecessors, at best it's noticeably faster and should help to reduce CPU bottlenecking during gameplay. For those looking to buy or construct a new, capable gaming PC, the i5 remains the default choice and the 6600K is the best iteration yet - AMD's older eight-core FX chips are cheaper, but our tests clearly demonstrate that despite the low-power many-core set-up of the new console CPUs, modern games generally prefer the high per-core performance that Intel provides.
. . . because, let's face it, nobody really cares about Kaby Lake compared to Zen/Summit Ridge.
Ehhh I'm taking this one with a grain of salt. It seems to be based more on speculation and possible grumbling from channel partners more than anything else.
Market watchers originally expected Intel and AMD to launch their new CPU platforms in the third and fourth quarter, respectively, to help boost PC demand in the second half, but both CPU makers have recently postponed their launch schedules to January 2017 at CES 2017 since the upstream supply chain still has serious inventory issues, and market demand has been slow.
Funny but man that's gotta be a terrible girlfriend if that winds up being a positive. I guess it depends on how many replacements there are running around at said music festival?
Infield single = baseball term, ball barely leaves the bat so it doesn't even make it into the outfield. You barely make it to first base just from raw running speed. In other words, it's the weakest possible hit you can get that still produces positive results.
. . . because, let's face it, nobody really cares about Kaby Lake compared to Zen/Summit Ridge.
Ehhh I'm taking this one with a grain of salt. It seems to be based more on speculation and possible grumbling from channel partners more than anything else.
You would need some serius GPU power to take advantage of that though.5820K/6800K vs. 6700K is one of the toughest picks for me. I want to believe that DX12 games will come out in greater quantities and they will benefit from 6+ cores in a way Total War Warhammer does.
The reason why I am "taking this with a grain of salt" is that we have 1-2 sources telling us that both Intel and AMD have made official changes to their release schedules because <reasons>, and that's actually really big news that I would wait to see released in a negative-spun-positive fashion before I believe it.
If AMD tells us to get excited because Summit Ridge is launching at CES 2017, then yeah, that's gonna tell us that some actual change has been made. But for now, I remain skeptical.
It sort-of makes sense for Intel to rest on their laurels in order to clear inventory, but AMD? They have already taken write-off charges on excess inventory in the past, and now would be the time to do it again if necessary. Waiting 3 months isn't going to help that excess Vishera inventory move anywhere. Just write the stuff off and let distributors/etailers liquidate the crap. It's not like anyone that wants Summit Ridge is going to sub in a discounted 8320 instead.
Skylake with fast DDR4 is probably a better tock than Haswell was.
We wszystkich testach, w których w użyciu była pamięć DDR3, stosowaliśmy moduły DDR-2133 działające z opóźnieniami 9-9-10-24 1N. W przypadku platformy LGA1151 korzystaliśmy z modułów DDR4 typu DDR-2666 działających z opóźnieniami 16-17-17-36 2N.
The difference between Intel and AMD inventory isn't super relevant. Retailers have plenty of stock of processors, full stop, and there won't be much demand for them if they were to launch in October. Not to mention the fact that you all seem to be ignoring the suggestion that AMD and Intel are both facing supplier shortages.
Right, what do you call someting in Baseball, that gets by on the merits of faster DDR4 alone, with worse power efficiency and a non-soldered cap.
Not to mention the fact that you all seem to be ignoring the suggestion that AMD and Intel are both facing supplier shortages.
AMD Zen
AMD said the Computex 2016 , Zen is a runnable sample from the factory back , now is the final optimization of the series. Depending on the scope of these actions follows sometimes even a Revision- or Stepping update the CPU to the mass production starts, by up to a quarter of it usually takes a few weeks to a bigger number of trade is available. Therefore, the to early 2017 pending six months is a very short window, AMD told a conference last winter , even a metal staple to Troubleshooting, and optimization of a processor can quickly take two months to complete.
It doesn't seem as if Intel is having supplier shortages, according to their own website. Is GlobalFoundries having trouble procuring wafers and/or copper? That seems unlikely to me, but I'm no expert on the matter, either.