Thread title needs to change. "game of thrones spoilers"
Umm do you mean Nvidia and AMD.Is the gap between current Intel and AMD GPUs as bad as it has been for CPUs? I am certainly looking forward to being able to reasonably choose an AMD CPU again, but will I be able to go full AMD without holding myself back?
Umm do you mean Nvidia and AMD.
Ryzen doesnt have iGPU.
If you wanna go full AMD I would wait until Vega is out.
Yes, I did mean Nvidia. Oops.
It seems like 1700 is the way to go. For 4K video editing, gaming and livestreaming, this seems to be a perfect choice. I was going to nab the 1800X, but I really don't need all of that power.
If anyone's opinion, with what we know of the 1700 and up lineup, would livestreaming while gaming seem possible like it is on the 1800X? With 8 cores, it should work out pretty well I would think?
Yes, both CPU's and GPU's look to be very competitive and will be nicely priced from AMD........I'm in the same boat, and I recently paired my E3-1270 with a sibling for distributed computing. Little did I know.
scorpio's cpu?
Thread title needs to change. "game of thrones spoilers"
Not unless there's a small miracle. Lisa Su's categorically ruled out AMD accepting semi-custom Zen contracts before 2018/19 no less than twice, most recently only a few months ago, and Microsoft reiterated a Q4 2017 for Scorpio just yesterday.
should i kick myself for buying a brand new prebuilt system 2 weeks ago with an i7700k? it was an upgrade to my 4 year old laptop...
However Mark cerny also stated that AMD liked th semi custom stuff showing up in console first , as it was a good test before they go out to other customers
We also gained some insight into how AMD's semi-custom hardware design relationships actually work. Up until now, the perception has been that console APUs are actually an assemblage of off-the-shelf AMD parts with limited modification. After all, PS4's GPU looks a lot like the Pitcairn design that debuted in the Radeon HD 7850 and 7870. The Xbox One equivalent bears more than a passing relationship to the Bonaire processor that debuted in the Radeon HD 7790.
"You may later on see something that looks very much like a console GPU as a discrete GPU, but that's then being very familiar with the design and taking inspiration from the console GPU. So the similarity, if you see one, is actually the reverse of what you're thinking," Cerny explains, saying that console designs are 'battle-tested' and thus easier to deploy as discrete GPU products.
Guys... that "extended instructions per second" benchmark means absolutely nothing for real usage. Come on. Contain your hype.
scorpio's cpu?
Especially when you pick the people's cpu your are testing with.
I just picked a 6700k at random and it is 550 slower than my results with the same cpu in the SSE test.
You'll be surprised at the amount of ignorance and apathy right now. I had to convince very intelligent friends that i7 is not the best just because it has a 7 in it (eg the i7 U line is deceptively low powered).I don't think that's likely. There are enough consumers in this market that like to read reviews and buy whatever provides the best cost/performance ratio, rather than sticking with brand loyalty regardless, that a well reviewed CPU range (and hopefully GPU range too) from AMD will impact on Intel's sales. It won't be huge, but it should be enough to make them take notice. At the very least you're going to see prices benefiting consumers as a result.
Wouldn't function in old games properly, you would have to run an xbox one emulator on it...
CPU for the PS5 and Xbox 10 will probably be a tweaked version of this.
You'll be surprised at the amount of ignorance and apathy right now. I had to convince very intelligent friends that i7 is not the best just because it has a 7 in it (eg the i7 U line is deceptively low powered).
The letters at the end are tiers between things like their ultra low power chips vs their higher performing chips with HQ. I'm not sure what core Ms are. It's pretty misleading to most consumers though.tbh it feels like Intel names their processors by throwing dice on the floor.
Core m processors are ultra low power, low clock speed processors that are cooled passively. Computers with core m are usually fanless.The letters at the end are tiers between things like their ultra low power chips vs their higher performing chips with HQ. I'm not sure what core Ms are. It's pretty misleading to most consumers though.
I need some in-game benchmarks! Specifically for games that are very CPU heavy like Battlefield 1.
Only for them to test the SP which does not stress the CPU at all like the MP does on some maps...
Has AMD's stock instantaneously reached 200 billion USD capitalization? If their chip performed effectively 20x Intel's core design, not only would they be valued at Intel's capitalization, but investors would flock to support them because it would allow large leaps in machine learning, research, and basically everything related to intense CPU compute.
Everything so far has indicated that Zen's IPC is 10% below Intel's core. With 8+ cores at the price, that's a huge deal. But these sorts of graphs are not reflective of reality.
Do we know if the 4-core chips are harvested from 8-core dies?
Considering they've made single-module bins for their Bulldozer derivatives I wouldn't put it past themI think the 8 core dies are two modules of 4 cores or if I remember correctly 2 CCX sub-units.
So the 6 core ones are probably binned 8 cores, but the 4 cores are probably just one CCX unit... I wonder if they'd make a ghetto 2 or 3 core chip down the road though.
I think the 8 core dies are two modules of 4 cores or if I remember correctly 2 CCX sub-units.
So the 6 core ones are probably binned 8 cores, but the 4 cores are probably just one CCX unit... I wonder if they'd make a ghetto 2 or 3 core chip down the road though.
Especially when you pick the people's cpu your are testing with.
I just picked a 6700k at random and it is 550 lower than my results with the same cpu in the SSE test.
Yeah I just did that same test with my 6700k and scored 569
Well this is what I mean. In the picture the Intel chips have a PT8 setting enabled in the benchmark. If the AMD unit does to then it is apples to apples so its a good showing for this specific instruction set but if the AMD chip does not then it is really misleading. A score of 742 is still good but why the misdirection by whoever ran the benchmark?
The thing get's released in under two weeks. The money's magically gonna disappear from your account if you wait a bit?So.... 7700K with ITX right now or AMD + iTx whenever they say this mobos will be released... Man, I don´t know what to do... I was planning on upgrading my PC like... this week.
So.... 7700K with ITX right now or AMD + iTx whenever they say this mobos will be released... Man, I don´t know what to do... I was planning on upgrading my PC like... this week.
That one segment is clearly a botched comparison but there's loads of good stuff in that benchmark as well. It has Ryzen above Broadwell-E in the integer, floating point, compression and crucially single thread performance tests. Don't write off the whole benchmark because one component has a messed up baseline.
Just saw this posted in the Anandtech forums. Really brings home what a ridiculous leap forward this is for AMD and what a colossal failure Bulldozer was:
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