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What's the point? To make the 'enthusiast' *cough* buy a whole new motherboard cpu and ram for 5%, Intels favourite sum.
The PC industry has been moving forward that way since the 1990's.
PCI-E 3.0, SATA Express, M.2 all are recent technologies that Intel have integrated into their motherboards, it's not their fault that AMD have been stale since 2010 so progression is now classed by some as milking.
With each new i7 from the 1st generation to the 5th generation what is the difference apart from a small speed increase as i cant see any ?
So what's the point ?
Don't blame AMD. They launched an 8 core CPU absolutely ages ago into a desktop board and socket that was more than affordable.
My mate showed me an article the other day where a 8350 basically beat a hex core Ivy with SLI at 4k.
Intel have been making hex cores for absolute eons now. You can pick one up for £59. So why do they insist on keeping 4 cores for their mainstream desktops? I don't get it.
http://www.tweaktown.com/tweakipedi...g-gtx-780-sli-vs-gtx-980-sli-at-4k/index.html
Just in case I get lynched.....
There's absolutely no fathomable reason why hex core CPUs are not proudly sitting in Z97 boards. Hell, the 980x came out years ago and fitted a somewhat mainstream board.
I'd be concerned that their Intel rig is crippled. It's a 49XX.
The follow up article comparing the 4770K is available:
http://www.tweaktown.com/tweakipedi...-with-gtx-980-vs-gtx-780-sli-at-4k/index.html
The rule seems to be: for 4K, get an AMD and put the difference into GPUs.
AMD released 990FX specifically for Bulldozer and guess what? it was a rebadged 890FX chipset. Both vendors have a long history of releasing new sockets at every opportunity, it's nothing new. Super Socket 7, Slot A, Socket A, Socket 754, Socket 939, AM1, AM1+, AM2, AM2+, AM3, AM3+, that's about one new socket every year for AMD up until they gave up in ~2011.
In GPU bottlenecked situations that can happen, it doesn't take away the fact that Ivy hex is a far superior CPU and that PCI-E 3.0 offers more than twice the bandwidth when actually needed. You can probably find situations where a PCI-E 1.0 system competes well with a PCI-E 2.0 system but it didn't stop AMD from making the progression to PCI-E 2.0 did it? AMD have all but given up on the processor/motherboard front at least until they release their new non-modular architecture, that doesn't mean Intel have to.
PCI-E 3.0, SATA Express, M.2 all are recent technologies that Intel have integrated into their motherboards
Love how the thread turned to Intel vs AMD