Soldato
Not that a CPU actually called "Skylake" would work on anything other than Z170...so its z170, z270, z370, z390 and z490 all for Skylake?
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Not that a CPU actually called "Skylake" would work on anything other than Z170...so its z170, z270, z370, z390 and z490 all for Skylake?
It was a choise, technically there is nothing that should prevent skylake running on z490.Not that a CPU actually called "Skylake" would work on anything other than Z170...
Indeed. I'd be very tempted to try the BIOS mod for my Maximus VIII Impact and drop in a 9900K, but they're still stupid money especially as I'd have to short 2 pads as well.It was a choise, technically there is nothing that should prevent skylake running on z490.
When I upgraded this year, from an i7 3930k, I specifically bought a decent x570 at the expense of a "lesser" CPU in the 3600. The reason is that I wanted a decent stop gap CPU until the 4000 series drops and I'll get a 12 core CPU, to last me years.
You'll find as you get older, you start not caring about max pc performance and more value for money aspect. I was the "must get the latest" fanboi for years, then I wised the *** up.
Bottom line is that although this is the last am4 launch, it'll do many just fine, for years to come.
When I upgraded this year, from an i7 3930k, I specifically bought a decent x570 at the expense of a "lesser" CPU in the 3600. The reason is that I wanted a decent stop gap CPU until the 4000 series drops and I'll get a 12 core CPU, to last me years.
You'll find as you get older, you start not caring about max pc performance and more value for money aspect. I was the "must get the latest" fanboi for years, then I wised the **** up and realised it's a waste of cash buying a new rig every release. Who cares what someone has in their Sig on a forum, as that forum sig epeen is apparently important to some lol.
You just have to look at the naff roll of honour threads in the gpu section lol.
Bottom line is that although this is the last am4 launch, it'll do many just fine, for years to come.
I think that’s a bit harsh on the roll of honour threads, sometimes it’s just nice to share details of your new purchase and collect feedback from fellow owners. It’s not always a dick waving contest.When I upgraded this year, from an i7 3930k, I specifically bought a decent x570 at the expense of a "lesser" CPU in the 3600. The reason is that I wanted a decent stop gap CPU until the 4000 series drops and I'll get a 12 core CPU, to last me years.
You'll find as you get older, you start not caring about max pc performance and more value for money aspect. I was the "must get the latest" fanboi for years, then I wised the **** up and realised it's a waste of cash buying a new rig every release. Who cares what someone has in their Sig on a forum, as that forum sig epeen is apparently important to some lol.
You just have to look at the naff roll of honour threads in the gpu section lol.
Bottom line is that although this is the last am4 launch, it'll do many just fine, for years to come.
I think that’s a bit harsh on the roll of honour threads, sometimes it’s just nice to share details of your new purchase and collect feedback from fellow owners. It’s not always a dick waving contest.
Changing to a single 8-core CCX very much solves latency issues. The latency from jumping between the pair of 4-core CCX on the chiplet is eliminated. Take a look at the benchmarks for the 3300X to see the benefit that brings in gaming.I don't think Zen3 is supposed to solve latency issues. Improve a bit maybe, with new IO die, more unified L3, possibly higher IF clock speed limit. But issues will remain, inherent to chiplet design
Changing to a single 8-core CCX very much solves latency issues. The latency from jumping between the pair of 4-core CCX on the chiplet is eliminated. Take a look at the benchmarks for the 3300X to see the benefit that brings in gaming.
Hell, that latency removal alone is likely to be enough to remove, if not surpass, Intel's fractional gaming performance lead.
Which means the 8 core chip will perform better than the 12+ core chips of the new ones right? Not sure if it works that way, but yes i will be swapping my 3700x for a new chip as well as i imagine it might help a lot with the new GPUs coming.Changing to a single 8-core CCX very much solves latency issues. The latency from jumping between the pair of 4-core CCX on the chiplet is eliminated. Take a look at the benchmarks for the 3300X to see the benefit that brings in gaming.
Hell, that latency removal alone is likely to be enough to remove, if not surpass, Intel's fractional gaming performance lead.
I don't think Zen3 is supposed to solve latency issues.
Should have emphasised solveWhat an odd thing to say, I am pretty sure that AMD will have targeted improvements from may angles to ensure an good uplift in performance, and they know that latency is an easy win, with a better CCD/CCX design, faster IF clock, and maybe even a smaller and more efficient I/O design, all of which will reduce the latency, and show an overall improvement in performance.
In certain workloads theoretically yes, but it's likely to be something only synthetics can see. In the real world probably not.Which means the 8 core chip will perform better than the 12+ core chips of the new ones right?
And I should've emphasised solve too. Because Zen 3 does solve a latency issue. Granted, the 8-core CCX does not solve the entire latency story, but it alone likely is enough to match Skylake.Should have emphasised solve
Improve, reduce latency yes, but not solve enough to match Skylake.
AMD’s Zen 4 Based Epyc Genoa CPUs May Feature up to 128 Cores; 5th Gen Ryzen up to 32 Cores
That's not really hype train. AMD have said from the beginning they fully intend to up core counts. Genoa is perfectly logical and expected. Not sure about 32 cores on mainstream desktop though, that seems a bit too much too soon. That's also doubling core counts on the chiplets (and there's no reason to think Zen 4 is moving back to monolithic designs) which seems a bit too much for 5nm, as well as 16c CCX so they don't regress latency. Then again the Zen 2 chiplets are pretty small inside a Matisse package, so there's room to grow them a little to allow for doubling up of cores.Choo Choo..........