True, but no more, i'm very optimistic about Zen 4 so AM5 platform will drive me for years, and if AMD continues to grow like that i won't have to smell Intel anymore.So much so that you bought 3 of their CPUs. That'll teach 'em.
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True, but no more, i'm very optimistic about Zen 4 so AM5 platform will drive me for years, and if AMD continues to grow like that i won't have to smell Intel anymore.So much so that you bought 3 of their CPUs. That'll teach 'em.
I can't stand nVidia, they're an awful company. But I've still got a 3090, as it was the best card for my use case.So much so that you bought 3 of their CPUs. That'll teach 'em.
I can't stand nVidia, they're an awful company. But I've still got a 3090, as it was the best card for my use case.
Being critical of a company and its practices doesn't mean you can't or won't ever buy their products.
10900k was good for FL studio because of low latency that monolithic design have and 10 cores which is good for multithread, Zen 1 had terrible latency, with Zen 2 they fixed that but still was slower than Intel, and with Zen 3 they perfected chiplet design so it had best single and multithread performance and i bought it immediately.Strange to go on and buy a CPU in three consecutive generations though after “hating” their practices, particularly when AMD had competitive products for all three of those barring maybe the 8700k. Perhaps FL Studio really needed the 10900k.
The GPU sector is a bit different as nVidia has a clear advantage in terms of feature set and a huge performance lead if you use ray tracing. If the use case also involves work/productivity tasks, then it’s even more understandable.
I just found it a bit odd with Gondar as he’ll give advice that’s completely at odds with what he’s just told us in this thread. That said, I don’t have any hatred for any of the companies mentioned, so it’s hard to grasp that mindset.
Whats the problem, without wathing the video?
there is no problem. people trying to run 4 sticks way above stock frequency and surprised when the memory controller can't handle it lol
Its called enabling XMP then wondering why the Intel platform - which supports XMP then boot loops. Ergo, its a problem.
wrong!! there are no 4x kits currently available as far as i am aware for the platform. Just because there are 4 slots it does not mean you need to fill them and if you do buy a low speed kit. Max supported is 128GB and this is/will be available in 2 dimms
**EDIT** i stand corrected-ish there is 1 kit available, a corsair 4x16gb kit rated at 4400mhz, this is on qvl for the z690 asus extreme
"Intel shared this table with us.
If the motherboard has two memory slots total, then the maximum support is DDR5-4800 in any configuration.
If the motherboard has four memory slots total, then the maximum support is DDR5-4400 when two slots are filled with any memory.
If all four memory slots are filled, single rank memory will support up to DDR5-4000.
If all four memory slots are filled, dual-rank memory will support up to DDR5-3600.
So technically Intel listing memory support on Alder Lake as DDR5-4800 is a bit of a misdirection compared to previous launches. If we were to look at parity, two modules in a four-slot board, then really we’d be quoting DDR5-4400. Funnily enough, all of Intel’s benchmarks presented at this launch were run at DDR5-4400, as per specification. Kudos to the testing team to staying within those guidelines."
Its called enabling XMP then wondering why the Intel platform - which supports XMP then boot loops. Ergo, its a problem.
will see is this is an intel problem if AM5 cpus/boards can do 6ghz with all 4 dimms or not when released.
Its called enabling XMP then wondering why the Intel platform - which supports XMP then boot loops. Ergo, its a problem.
It used to be more true, but nowadays desktop CPUs like the 12900K and 5950X are so powerful and HEDT is so ruinously expensive.I don't think its a problem considering most people will prefer a single dual channel kit. Correct me if I'm wrong but if you require 64gb or above wouldn't a workstation/server better suit your needs?
Z690 and DDR4, 4x8GB 3200 running at 3600 no problem. More to do with RAM quality than chipset. Same RAM since gen one Ryzen, the excellent 8Pack B-die Samsung.Anyone with half a brain (which I know excludes Jay) would have known that the very first desktop DDR5 platform was unlikely to be a winner when it comes to memory speeds and overclocking. X99 was an absolute dumpster fire when DDR4 first hit the market, struggling to run even 3000MHz reliably. Memory ICs, IMCs and motherboards will improve over time. Thanks to Z690 owners for beta testing.
Z690 and DDR4, 4x8GB 3200 running at 3600 no problem. More to do with RAM quality than chipset. Same RAM since gen one Ryzen, the excellent 8Pack B-die Samsung.
I don't think its a problem considering most people will prefer a single dual channel kit. Correct me if I'm wrong but if you require 64gb or above wouldn't a workstation/server better suit your needs?