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The advent of Ryzen and the response of Intel
The advent of Ryzen has brought Intel in near-panic mode.
All of a sudden there are overclockable i3's announced and Pentium G series and i5's with hyperthreading.
There are also rumours about a upcoming mainstream (Socket 1151) Coffee Lake i7 with 6 cores/12 threads...
All this at a price, or another trade-off:
- The Pentium G doesn't support as much instructions as an i3 (which has the same amount of cores/threads, but is more expensive and has more cache).
- The overclockable i3 reaches speeds up to i7 level, but has half the cores/threads (plus far less cache and a worse IGP).
- The (overclockable) i5 with hyperthreading is rumoured to have a tdp of 100 Watt.
I do hope the 8-core, 16-thread Ryzen will blow all of Intel out of the water though.
Last edited by Dirk Broer; 02-08-2017 at 01:12 AM.
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Time will tell. :-) Personally I'm not too excited by the latest cpu offerings. Seems like any more an i3 functioning as a life support system for a high end graphics card gets more crunching output for the projects I'm interested in. Sadly both high end graphics cards and cpu's crank out the heat. My one voyage in a fancy 5960X some time back was an expensive but educational lesson for me. I enjoy OGR-28, and that of course is not a gpu effort. I will watch the ryzen and see how things go from the heat generation end of things and then maybe purchase one. The 5960X was/is a powerful chip but the current draw and heat produced severely limit my use of it. In hind sight I probably should have just picked up a couple 4 core i5's for the OGR thing... live and learn. Hopefully ryzen pans out to be a good chip for the crunching world. :-)
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