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9900KS...

Soldato
Joined
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this obsession with 14nm is truly bizarre. What the hell does it matter what's under the bonnet, so long as it delivers the goods.
It's not even remotely bizarre. It's a clear indicator of the quagmire Intel are in right now.

They cannot move past 14nm in any meaningful way. Refresh after refresh after refresh on the same 14nm means there is no in-silicon fixes for the bazillion vulnerabilities, there is no move to a new architecture, no real increase in IPC, just ramping the clocks higher and higher which means thermals are through the roof and efficiency is through the floor. And all the while prices are going up and up and up, instead of coming down - why should a ridiculously mature process see an increase in costs, especially when the products released on it are broken at a security level and strained to bursting point with their capabilities?

Does it matter to Johnny Commoner? Not really. Does it matter to we enthusiasts? Very much so. And if you claim to be an enthusiast, yet don't actually care, then you exist in a contradiction.
 
Soldato
Joined
19 Feb 2011
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5,849
It's not even remotely bizarre. It's a clear indicator of the quagmire Intel are in right now.

They cannot move past 14nm in any meaningful way. Refresh after refresh after refresh on the same 14nm means there is no in-silicon fixes for the bazillion vulnerabilities, there is no move to a new architecture, no real increase in IPC, just ramping the clocks higher and higher which means thermals are through the roof and efficiency is through the floor. And all the while prices are going up and up and up, instead of coming down - why should a ridiculously mature process see an increase in costs, especially when the products released on it are broken at a security level and strained to bursting point with their capabilities?

Does it matter to Johnny Commoner? Not really. Does it matter to we enthusiasts? Very much so. And if you claim to be an enthusiast, yet don't actually care, then you exist in a contradiction.

+1 we just had an email from our Dell Rep stating they are facing HUGE delays on Intel CPU's of all varieties, Intel is in a mess right now, the fact they are marketing this as the "King of Gaming CPU's" tells you all you need to know, its an ultrabinned 9900k cpu with very stringent parameters to meet their requirements. Anyone thinking these will be huge supply is going to be wrong, and thus they will carry a huge price premium is my bet, we have already seen how resellers like to gouge, well given the demand for these and the scarcity of them expect the prices to be ridiculous. Yes Intel can set an MSRP for them as low as they like, but anyone with half a brain knows these will be massively gouged in price.

And like @LePhuronn says, will they actually contain any meaningful IPC increases? any hardware level fixes to their extremely insecure leaky architecture?? Intel have painted themselves into a "Moar MHZ" Corner and this is just showing that, from what i have been hearing from Dell and other partners is Intel is not even sure if their 10nm is going to succeed in any meaningful manner and are looking at shelving it further... the thread from AMD is real, and AMD's 7nm EUV is right around the corner.

This is a cash grab from Intel with a headliner to try and stay relevant and stave off lost sales to AMD, nothing more, nothing less.
 
Soldato
Joined
24 Sep 2013
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2,890
Location
Exmouth, Devon
..this obsession with 14nm is truly bizarre. What the hell does it matter what's under the bonnet, so long as it delivers the goods.

..if Intel launched a 16c 32t CPU next week that was 10-20% faster across all scenario's than a Ryzen 3950X at a similar price but still 'only' 14nm, would you turn it down?

...if yes, you would be in a tiny minority.


SO if you went into a car showroom in August knowing a new model with better technology was coming in September...would you get the old model on an older registration? They both deliver the goods.
 
Associate
Joined
28 Sep 2018
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2,267
Intel did a limited release with the 8086k. I don't see the reason for this outrage over what is a binned chip, being marketed as a binned chip and sold under the same naming convention. Comet Lake is still the next true replacement.
 
Soldato
Joined
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Under the hot sun.
Soldato
Joined
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9,861
Intel further extending their gaming lead, using their 5 year old process and 4 year old architecture, sigh.


Really wish the Ryzen 3000 series was at least 10% faster in gaming across the board, would have forced Intel to release something actually new
 
Soldato
Joined
20 Dec 2006
Posts
3,756
Might be a dead socket/chipset whatever but people like me it may represent a possible CPU swap upgrade now or down the line.

I'd consider it once the dust has settled and 1151 is forgotten about.

I have six cores boosting to 5Ghz and think the difference in game would be 10fps at most in a multicore optimised title looking at YT videos of multicore comparisons.

Biggest jump is 4c to 6c, sometimes an improvement to 8c is seen (generally not though) and diminishing returns have then kicked in.

IPC doesn't seem massively different compared to my 8600k, maybe 10% better at most?

Yes for me only gaming perf is of interest
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Nov 2009
Posts
13,252
Location
Under the hot sun.
Intel further extending their gaming lead, using their 5 year old process and 4 year old architecture, sigh.

Really wish the Ryzen 3000 series was at least 10% faster in gaming across the board, would have forced Intel to release something actually new

Define "gaming lead"? The scenario where this "gaming lead" exists is very narrow and only because of core speeds. It requires RTX2080Ti, 1080p resolution at medium/high settings.
Any deviation to worse GPU or higher resolution or higher graphics (ultra, RT) or better ram for the AMD system in comparison, would results a parity with the AMD CPUs. Even the cheaper ones like the 3700X/3800X.
 
Soldato
Joined
26 Sep 2010
Posts
7,157
Location
Stoke-on-Trent
Intel further extending their gaming lead, using their 5 year old process and 4 year old architecture, sigh.
In ridiculously fringe cases maybe, or scenarios where it really doesn't matter anyway.

That's possibly the 1 good thing you can say about milking Skylake and 14nm+++++++++++++ Intel know how to wring its neck for everything it has. They won't have such luxury when they finally move to a new arch and a new process.
 
Associate
Joined
14 Nov 2005
Posts
1,543
..this obsession with 14nm is truly bizarre. What the hell does it matter what's under the bonnet, so long as it delivers the goods.

..if Intel launched a 16c 32t CPU next week that was 10-20% faster across all scenario's than a Ryzen 3950X at a similar price but still 'only' 14nm, would you turn it down?

...if yes, you would be in a tiny minority.
This is true but is this not the limityation of 14nm, does 14nm not make a chip such as the one you described virtually impossible? I think this is why people are waiting for Intel to move awau from 14nm
 
Associate
Joined
14 Dec 2016
Posts
958
Lol 1yr warranty and "upto 5ghz" boost, straw clutching at it's finest. I wouldn't touch one with a bargepole, as even Intel has no faith in that silicon which is being pushed to it's limit lasting more than a year lmao.

3yr warranty or gtfo Intel, can see it now, tons of dead chips in the first 18 months as people scrimp on cooling for these and they fry themselves.
 
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