VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,570
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I flinch at buying any CPU that costs over $100. $1500 is... out of the question. (Unless it was a 30-core or better Core chip. Then that pricing might make sense to me.)
It's an arms race that basically all of the major corporations are playing right now. Meanwhile, income inequality hasn't been this high since right before the great depression. People are still paying for these overly-expensive things, but less and less of them are, and once it passes a threshold, reality sets in.Intel seems to be betting on the idea that customers who will buy a $1k processor will have no problems paying $1500 for one.
We'll see if this was a good bet or not soon enough...
Intel seems to be betting on the idea that customers who will buy a $1k processor will have no problems paying $1500 for one.
We'll see if this was a good bet or not soon enough...
I'd be very surprised if they sell many at $1,500 a pop. D:
I'd be very surprised if they sell many at $1,500 a pop. D:
What will its stock clockspeed be?
I just can't see many people(who are effectively desktop users) being silly enough, or having the need for this decacore.I won't. Remember the gouging on the QX6700?
You could argue that the QX6700 was a bigger deal when it came out, but still, this is Intel's first HEDT decacore CPU.
I flinch at buying any CPU that costs over $100. $1500 is... out of the question. (Unless it was a 30-core or better Core chip. Then that pricing might make sense to me.)
My strategy? Buy a mature 22nm haswell-e 6 core, and by the time 8 or 10 cores regularly get used in games (many years from now), used Broadwell E chips will be cheap
My strategy? Buy a mature 22nm haswell-e 6 core, and by the time 8 or 10 cores regularly get used in games (many years from now), used Broadwell E chips will be cheap
I won't. Remember the gouging on the QX6700?
You could argue that the QX6700 was a bigger deal when it came out, but still, this is Intel's first HEDT decacore CPU.
I'm gonna just guess and say 3.0 GHz?
Guessing because when the first hexacore came out (i7 920, was it?) AMD wasn't quiiiiite so far behind. Yeah, the Phenom II X6 1100T wasn't as powerful, but it's not like the gap today where the 220W FX-9590 can barely even keep up with an 88W Core i7-4790K.
This is monopoly pricing, pure and simple. And the old definition of monopoly based purely on "what % of the market does this company have?" is inadqeuate these days.
(Edit: actually the raw Passmark score seems to say the 1100T is neck and neck with an i7 960...going to take that one with a grain of salt. But I still think the basic thrust of the above, that being "Intel has no competition to speak of," explains this.)
The price is very high, but I dont see that as the main problem. The main problem I see is what will be the use for the chip? I think even hex core will be more than sufficient for games at least through this console generation. So maybe for some productivity apps, but would not most go the full bore server route for such heavily threaded software? And I cant believe you will not have to sacrifice some overclocking headroom with the 10 core. If it were clearly superior in games, I can see users being willing to pay that price, but I dont think it will be.
You buy a 6950X or a chip like it for one reason: you want the best, money-is-no-object. It is basically an ego thing.
There is nothing wrong with that, though, IMO. If high performance gaming PCs are your hobby and you have the money to spend (it's not that expensive of a hobby compared to many others), then why not?
Agreed, but my point was in what application is it "best"? Would not a six or eight core (assuming better overclocks) be better in most cases anyway?
Even in a monopoly you can price things beyond people's willingness to pay, unless it's a life-or-death matter.
Agreed, but my point was in what application is it "best"? Would not a six or eight core (assuming better overclocks) be better in most cases anyway?
I flinch at buying any CPU that costs over $100. $1500 is... out of the question.