How do we expect Laptop versions to be priced? Ive been holding out to buy a new laptop so that the CPUs would be good enough for PS2/GC emulation on 720p/2xAA, given the speeds on these and the architectural improvements hopefully its enough.
I want to know how big that on-chip GPU memory is and see how well it works. I'm really curious.
Desktop CPU wise, I still see no reason to upgrade from my i7 920 (running at 3.6 GHz).
AnandTech said:Haswell will do what Ivy Bridge didn't. You'll see a version of Haswell with up to 128MB of embedded DRAM, with a lot of bandwidth available between it and the core. Both the CPU and GPU will be able to access this embedded DRAM, although there are obvious implications for graphics.
At least 16GB OMGDDR800.
I think most Nehalem/Bloomfield folks should wait for Ivy-E/Hawell-E. Whichever is the one that pops up in Nov/Dec. That'll be the time to jump.
Broadwell is going to be BGA, which means the chips will be soldered to the board.
According to a trusted source in the motherboard industry, select Broadwell chips will indeed come soldered onto desktop motherboards. Lower-end models might not be available in socketed configurations at all, it seems. Our source did, however, reaffirm Intel's position that socketed CPUs aren't being dropped completely. We were told socketed processors are on the roadmap until at least 2016.
Interestingly, our source said selling motherboards with soldered-on CPUs gives larger board makers an advantage over their smaller rivals. Intel's higher-volume customers will be able to pull processors from larger pools of chips, allowing them to cherry pick parts for higher-end products. Motherboard makers may be able to sell boards with pre-overclocked CPUs—or at least with chips that have proven clock speed headroom.
RMAs will be more complicated with soldered-on CPUs, and it sounds like the details are still being worked out on that front. Our source said mobo makers may have to handle replacing damaged CPUs themselves, even if they're eventually reimbursed by Intel. Again, that could favor larger producers whose service facilities have the BGA soldering equipment required for the task. Those manufacturers probably have better RMA service anyway, though.
Yeah, the enthusiast platform will continue to be LGA.Edit - Seems like LGA will still be around for Broadwell in some form, and it is more likely the lower end CPU's going onto BGA.
Delid it. Most should hit 4.8-5.0 once you get that terrible TIM out of there. It takes 30 mins and isn't nearly as scary as it sounds.If the overclocking is that much better then I might consider that upgrade but hate the fact I'd need a new mobo. I caught hell trying to overclock my 3570k to 4.7ghz
Yeah, the enthusiast platform will continue to be LGA.
Like today we have Socket 1155 (Sandy/Ivy) and Socket 2011 (Sandy-E/Ivy-E), Broadwell-E will be LGA.
Delid it. Most should hit 4.8-5.0 once you get that terrible TIM out of there. It takes 30 mins and isn't nearly as scary as it sounds.
40 vs. 16 PCI-E lanes, if that is important to your setup. Otherwise, not really.I might try that. For gaming is there any advantage of the 2011 vs 1155?
That's one thing I will never do... delid. People say that like it's nothing. I have shaky hands and I sweat too much to do that crap.
Yeah I'll be waiting for Broadwell and Maxwell to hit before building my monstrosity.
Thinking about getting a GTX 780m and Haswell based laptop though.
http://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-780M.88993.0.html
http://videocardz.com/39987/nvidia-geforce-gtx-770m-and-780m-spotted-monster-gaming-notebooks
Why do a laptop when you can just hook up a desktop and keep upgrading?
The 128MB of VRAM on the GTe is interesting, but the real serious business would start with Broadwell if they went ~256MB of eRAM + DDR4.
Pffft. A marine who can't pack a 900D needs to go to the weightroom.
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Because I'm in the military and get deployed all over the place. This ASUS saved my ass last deployment whenever I had downtime. It's starting to show its age though.
4 cores...where is my 8 core / 16 threads already intel
A for effort though! How many people would actually take the time to do that as opposed to complain on a forum? Respect.Wrote Intel and got a stock "we do not comment on unannounced products" response. Guess I couldn't expect anything more.
So why don't review sites just convert it to FPS then? It is easier to understand that a 3570k is good for 54 fps compared to a 920 which is good for 43 fps. What info gets lost when the review site does the calculation compared to when the reader has to do it?
Notice SLI shows a much better average FPS, but have gigantic stutters the first graph masked.
Wait WTF, am I misunderstanding here or are we really getting 3.3GHz quads in ultrabooks??? My current 16-incher tops out at 3.2GHz with quad TB
Edit: Looking a bit closer I see they haven't detailed the CPU's ending with U, which I guess stands for Ultrabook :/
What he is saying, and what others have said, is show the exact same data, but instead of ms, show each frame as a FPS number to make it easily recognizable.Because it's a useless step. FPS is useful in rendering, how many frames can my rig render in a second. With a game you want a smooth experience and that's why that graph shows what frame time 99% of all frames was rendered in. It's really FPS that's the strange metric.
PCperspective "converted" some graphs over to FPS, but I personally find the graph showing all frame times over the test period much more helpful than a number or a simple graph. Frame time graphs also show big stutters (one frame on screen for 100ms, 0.1second) as the big important thing they are. IMO they just flat out make more sense and give a better view over how the game is displayed.
Notice SLI shows a much better average FPS, but have gigantic stutters the first graph masked.
Heh heh heh. 3 Maxwell GPUs are going into that 900D... Maybe CM will have a Cosmos III out by then.
No he doesn't, but the answer to that question will depend on which 280mm rad you are talking about. The final answer will be yes most likely. There is 110mm of clearance, which means a radiator 60mm thick will fit, although probably snugly (25mm per fan).do you have the 900D with you? can you please tell me if there is enough space to do a pull/push configuration with a 280mm Radiator on the top part?
Nvidia GeForce 650 supposedly.
Nvidia GeForce 650 supposedly.
A for effort though! How many people would actually take the time to do that as opposed to complain on a forum? Respect.
Wait WTF, am I misunderstanding here or are we really getting 3.3GHz quads in ultrabooks??? My current 16-incher tops out at 3.2GHz with quad TB
Edit: Looking a bit closer I see they haven't detailed the CPU's ending with U, which I guess stands for Ultrabook :/
Bearing in mind just gameplay was shown and the 650 was TDP locked at 35W, no framerates were shown. One could be 50 and one could be 90 for all we know and they would look comparable on 60HZ monitors, but one would have significantly more room to grow.
I wonder how much performance that eDRAM will add, and how much the GT3 alone will gain without it. I was hoping for 13" laptops with GT3e, but that doesn't seem like the plan now.
I have an old Phenom 2 1090T from 2010. Still trying to decide between waiting for this, Steamroller, or getting an i7-3770K.
What's the expected release date for Haswell?
Maybe that's just the initial launch?Apparently mobile version of haswell only will feature HD4600 which is just tiny bit improvement over HD4000. The real improvement which is HD5200 is desktop only.
Probably not. The big generational changes in interface systems (SATA 3.0, PCI-E 3.0, USB 3.0) already happened with Ivy.So... is it worth waiting for desktop Haswell? In the process of building a new PC and I can't really do much without getting the processor, haha.