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AMD Zen 3 (5000 Series), rumored 17% IPC gain.

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What send to be forgotten is it seems much easier to get the expected performance it of an AMD part. Intel, whilst being high performing, need better coolers and users to get the most out of them and still put out a lot more heat into the room.
 
That's a 10900K.

According to the Steam Survey, 99.04% of all subscriptions/users have from 1-core to 8-core CPUs.
According to AMD's own product positioning, 8-core is Performance tier and everything above is Enthusiast tier.

This reminds us of Intel's behaviour when the 4-core CPUs had been the Performance tier till March 2017.


https://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/cpus/
 
According to the Steam Survey, 99.04% of all subscriptions/users have from 1-core to 8-core CPUs.
According to AMD's own product positioning, 8-core is Performance tier and everything above is Enthusiast tier.

This reminds us of Intel's behaviour when the 4-core CPUs had been the Performance tier till March 2017.


https://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/cpus/

And?
 
I said 5.3 GHz which has already been achieved on an older 10-core CPU:


https://ark.intel.com/content/www/u...0900k-processor-20m-cache-up-to-5-30-ghz.html

Are you trolling now? :)
Clock speeds of one architecture can't be taken granted for different architecture.
Already architectures themselves have effect to how well CPUs clock.
(with easily clocking architectures usually not good for IPC)
And with same old 14nm++++++ heat output of those bigger fatter cores with lot more transistors could well limit clocks.
Remember that architecture was designed from the ground up for 10nm.
 
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