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Haswell refresh price list leaked

Sorry but a minute ago it was all the die size.
I'm aware of the transistor design (Was waiting for that rebuttal tbh)

As far as I see it, I don't believe it can't be done, I just think it's done on purpose, but I guess we'll find it in years to come.
Neither of us knows 100%, so lets not pretend we know more than we do.

http://iweb.tms.org/PbF/JOM-0606-67.pdf

Have a quick look....
 
The TM is fine for its purpose... I.e... Stock speeds

But they don't tell people to water cool them and overclock the **** off them...

I think you need to read the thread properly starting with your own posts.


IIRC the 4770k has the "K" on the end to say it is for overclocking and you also get to pay extra for it to boot.
 
I'm not going to try and digest that :p

But I say how AMD have bare face lied before, I don't think Intel are above it either (I don't even think that's Intels document, and it's from 2006.......)

We'll have to wait and see what the future holds, that's my standpoint.

The only bit of that article you have to digest is the date

June 2006 lol

This predates SB, SB-E, IB, IB-E and Haswell. Things have moved on since 2006.:D
 
AMD, Intel and Nvidia all do research and planning years in advance...

Can't actually find the proper Intel one :/

Theory and practical are radically different, hence netburst.

Planning in advance only gets so far, they physically wouldn't have had anything near 22nm, let alone 32nm back in 2006!.
 
Theory and practical are radically different, hence netburst.

Planning in advance only gets so far, they physically wouldn't have had anything near 22nm, let alone 32nm back in 2006!.

And yet were able to get the solder to degrade and crack on much larger process nodes...

Funny that all the big dies are soldered but the smaller, denser ones aren't :cool:
 
You can wait for all the proof you want but it's obvious to anyone that reads a few white papers and has basic understanding of metallurgy that small dies + high density = problems.

:)

You remember what they say about Assume

What is your background in metallurgy as a matter of interest ?
 
You remember what they say about Assume

What is your background in metallurgy as a matter of interest ?

Studied it for a while.... personally crap happened... never went back into it..

I wouldn't say I'm an expert by any means but I know enough to understand papers, research and stuff.

I should get back into it....
 
The interesting thing is how will AMD handle the issue? People have already blamed this TIM issue on them avoiding a lower process node.

In the past they have been and are currently using TIM on their APU's.

If people think that TIM over solder is what is holding back AMD from smaller nodes, they are idiots. I am sure the main thing holding them back is budget for development.

I don't doubt the solder can crack (still not convinced that soldering is impossible though) but there are a number of possible solutions than crap TIM. Why not something similar to CLU if it is an issue?
 
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Am not the for sure...

All my 4770K benches I done can't even beat my old 2600k bench scores...:(
What speed was the 2600k at, and whats the most stable for benching you eeked out of the 4770k? Curious as i found my hw at 4.2 to be roughly equal to my previous 3770k @4.5.
 
Intel have already stated you can't use solder on things that small.... That's why they're looking into a high performance replacement or a more durable solder.

But the solder they use today, here and now does not work.

The interesting thing is how will AMD handle the issue? People have already blamed this TIM issue on them avoiding a lower process node.

There was an article on this somewhere, AMD said why they are avoiding the lower process node (GloFlo 20nm)

Its so small its causing more electrical resistance resulting in higher temperatures and less stability at higher clocks, efficiency improvement are ~20% at best and it costs; i think it was 48% more (vs 28nm)

AMD think they can get better APU's by sticking with 28nm, GloFlo 28nm has yet to mature, Excavator is still on 28nm.

About a year ago both AMD and Nvidia made the same complaints about TSMC's 20nm, which is why they are in no rush to move to it, you may have noticed both are still developing new architectures on 28nm while 20nm is already up and running.

I think if Intel were honest they would tell you they are finding the same problems as they go smaller and smaller.

We are starting to hit a dead end on silicon.
 
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