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why is SB-E named 3xxx ?

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surely they should be named like 2900 or something, given they are the same architecture, generation and node as the normal sandy bridges?

also, with their chips named like 3800 and similar, when they release ivy bridge they will have to name them either 3500k etc (in which case they will appear to be releasing lower end chips which would surely hurt sales) or 4500k etc (which would surely be reserved for haswell?)

i just don't see the logic in the naming scheme. there is plenty of room from 2800 up to 2990 for them to use.
 
3 thousand sounds better than 2 thousand.

Marketing, all marketing.

yeah but the only people who'll be buying SB-E will be enthusiasts (hell i am an enthusiast and i still won't be getting it) and they will look at benchmarks or reviews before getting anything. people like us who actually have a clue about pc's aren't just gonna buy something like that blind, and anyone who doesn't have a clue is not gonna have any desire or need to spend that much money on a cpu.
 
Well people going to buy a new PC from an OEM shop will see that 3k is better than 2k.

It gets people all the time, especially in the GPU sector.
 
This or Intel want to leave 2700-2900k open to the non extreme SB CPU's

yeah but it doesn't seem likely to me they will release any more after the 2700k. literally no point. the only SBs worth releasing now would be a 2100k, but even that might be a bad idea for them as it might undermine 2500k sales too much
 
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