Soldato
Nvm
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Maybe the retail version will basically be just like a 12th gen Alder Lake in performance (same Golden Cove cores afterall), but simply clocked higher compared to the 12900K.880sc at 5.5 would be a regression in ipc. Lets give it the benefit of doubt that bios and ucode isn’t mature yet.
Maybe the retail version will basically be just like a 12th gen Alder Lake in performance (same Golden Cove cores afterall), but simply clocked higher compared to the 12900K.
Easy, drop AM4 prices and add a few new CPUs for the platform. Most people want bang for buck, you just need to get the pricing rightIntel 13th Gen Core “Raptor Lake-S” officially supports DDR-5600 and DDR4-3200 memory
Source: https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-1...cially-supports-ddr-5600-and-ddr4-3200-memory
Best bang for buck = i5/i7 13th gen with cheap DDR4 (Can't see how Zen4 will get close to the price/performance here)
Flagship performance = i9, 24 core (8+16) with top end DDR5
Masterstroke by Intel IMO
Easy, drop AM4 prices and add a few new CPUs for the platform. Most people want bang for buck, you just need to get the pricing right
No its not fantastic news. Its backwards thinking that is going to hold the market back, limit peak performance and keep DDR5 prices higher for longer. We would be better off if 13th gen didn't support DDR4 then DDR5 would drop in price as its mass produced more meaning we would all end up with better price/performance sooner. DDR4 is a big part of way so many people skipped 12th gen and if DDR4 is a big part of 13th gen many of us are going to skip 13th gen as well. Which only hurts Intel.Don't think you're aware how much faster i5/i7 13th gen CPU's, even with cheap DDR4, are likely to be compared to AM4. Having DDR4 suport for brand new 13th gen is a fantastic move.
Funny, I don't think you're aware of this fact either, in that 13th Gen isn't going to be much faster than 12th Gen. ST will get a fractional bump, MT will only see a bump for the SKUs which increase the E cores. So yes, 13th gen will be faster than pretty much everything on AM4, but only to the same degree as 12th gen currently is.Don't think you're aware how much faster i5/i7 13th gen CPU's, even with cheap DDR4, are likely to be compared to AM4
Numpty. DDR4 3200mhz support is crap. They are just trying to increase the performance gap between the two.Intel 13th Gen Core “Raptor Lake-S” officially supports DDR-5600 and DDR4-3200 memory
Source: https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-1...cially-supports-ddr-5600-and-ddr4-3200-memory
Masterstroke by Intel IMO
Eh? There aren't any official standards above DDR4 3200Mhz therefore they can't officially offer support for anything better.Numpty. DDR4 3200mhz support is crap. They are just trying to increase the performance gap between the two.
That's true. The info does say improved memory overclocking, but I think DDR5 will be getting most the love.Eh? There aren't any official standards above DDR4 3200Mhz therefore they can't officially offer support for anything better.
What is actually nonsense is the fact they've omitted PCI-E 5.0 M.2 support from the CPU. So if you want that then you'll need to sacrifice 8x of the 16x 5.0 slot and run the GPU at 8x, be that 5.0 or 4.0.
Quite why they chose to do this is beyond me, seems like they don't want to compete with AMD on the I/O front, but then they haven't been doing that since 2017 really.
It might be to maintain maximum compatibility with 12th gen boards, since they're basically the same CPUs.
They could just have it detect 4.0 in the BIOS based on the board, so not really a good excuse, more likely a cost saving measure.
My thoughts are since their primary market is OEMs and Intel hate in-socket upgrades, that they do things like this to minimise the need for additional testing/QA, so they'll add new features to kaby lake-alikes very grudgingly.