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When is Broadwell out then? So Haswell isnt even out yet and we already know of its predecessor???
Performance has saturated, mainly because they are powerful enough. Now efficiency comes![]()
The Simpsons said:Lisa: But I have something more important to say. For reasons
beyond my control, I will soon become vapid, sluggish and
slow witted. So before that happens, I want to share some
things with you that have really meant a lot to me.
Technician 1: What is she DOING out there? I'll cut off her mic.
Technician 2: [Seemingly entranced by Lisa] No, no, no. Let her speak.
[Pause] I'm trying to get fired.
I would say performance has saturated because of physics (speed of light/electrons isn't fast enough) and diminishing returns (multi-cores). Somehow I doubt Intel engineers sit round a table and decide not to make their chips go ridiculously faster.. unless they know something we don't and are holding back on purpose / woooo conspiracy.
I'd take a quad core 2500k without a GPU and save myself £30 if the option were there
I'm in the market for a new computer soon as I'm running an old Phenom X4 955 rig at home and would like to update. Presumably it's worth waiting for Haswell (I'm not in desperate need; one at home is fine at the moment) - will it still be on the same socket and use the same memory as Sandy/Ivy-bridge? I'm going to start collecting bits and pieces as they go on offer (SSD, memory etc) but presumably I'll have to hold out on the motherboard as they'll release a new chipset for the Haswell processors.
No, it will be using the new LGA 1150 Socket, which will also be the same socket for Broadwell.
Welcome to OcUKPresumably new socket means a more expensive motherboard!
Does Haswell offer enough of a performance gain to justify not getting an Ivy Bridge? I've read that preliminary benchmarks suggest a slight bump in performance of the order of about 10%. Presumably if it's a new socket and new processor line the Ivy Bridge processors and motherboards will drop a little in price, which then makes the decision a little more difficult.
If you're not in a rush Dave then its worth waiting for Haswell, just to see what happens and to open up some more options for yourself.
For me, performance gains have been merely incremental since the i7 920 launch back in 2008. Intel had AMD whipped then, and really haven't had to pull any bunnies out of the hat since. Looks like 5-10% tock-tick bumps from now on....