Soldato
- Joined
- 18 May 2010
- Posts
- 12,853
Help us AMD, you are our only hope
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I thought that must have been a mistake but just checked the pricing, can't believe how badly priced Skylake is, for an extra 30 odd pound you can pick up an 5930K![]()
The high board price for X99 that gets mentioned is pretty much negated when you look at the price of the 6700k and a board to go with it. My whole X99 setup cost 11 quid more than a 6700k, factor in the sale of my 4790k, board and ram it's been a very cheap up/side grade.Wait what, £389 for a 6700k? So a 6700k + probably the cheapest Z170 board possible is still more than a 5820k + a mid range X99 board?
I saw a lot of people saying X99 was expensive because of the extra £50-60 you had to put on a motherboard but that surely must be gone if a 6700k is £390.
Wait what, £389 for a 6700k? So a 6700k + probably the cheapest Z170 board possible is still more than a 5820k + a mid range X99 board?
I saw a lot of people saying X99 was expensive because of the extra £50-60 you had to put on a motherboard but that surely must be gone if a 6700k is £390.
The high board price for X99 that gets mentioned is pretty much negated when you look at the price of the 6700k and a board to go with it. My whole X99 setup cost 11 quid more than a 6700k, factor in the sale of my 4790k, board and ram it's been a very cheap up/side grade.![]()
This is what happens to the market when there is no competition. Intel have the fastest product, so they have no need to make a faster one. They'll just keep shuffling the prices and changing the model numbers to make people bite.
Or try to..
People are wise now. I see more people upgrading X58 machines to Xeons than people buying new stuff. What's the point? I just bought an Alienware brand new with a CPU that's also pretty much brand new (5820k) and it's no faster than my old 3970x which was basically a 3930k with more cache and that was released in 2011.
So expect a lot of juggling from Intel. They now need to try and forge a market alone and that's not an easy thing to do. Why would people swap out their CPU board and ram with something practically identical?
They've had their fun beating AMD but now comes the time where their stuff really is a hard sell. Making fun of how much a 2600k beats a 8320 is old hat now and they no longer have any products to tempt people with because people have already bought from them.
Exactly the same thing will happen to Nvidia if AMD die in the GPU sector. They will have no one to take the wee out of and there won't be any bragging rights for the spiteful people that love to gloat (see above in this very thread) so Nvidia's sales will die on their back end.
"Hey every one, I just bought a new Nvidia GPU that's better than the Nvidia GPU I already have !"
No wee taking, no threads of doom.. It'll all be over.
Yep, cheaper to import from the states including import duty and tax, it's ridiculous.pgi947 said:Someone's being robbed, either retailers are or customers are.
I can get a 6700k locally for $370 (£240), a quick browse of ocUK shows them at £389 ($600).
You could probably import one for less then UK retailer pricing.
I think it's getting to the time where CPU's, and computers in general are commodity items. It's starting to happen with mobile phones too, tablets as well.
Sky lake is a joke on the consumer, we should be on 8 core CPU's now, 16 multithreaded, if Intel did that for the consumer CPU's then people, including me, would lap them up