Monday, May 8th 2017
Intel Could Launch Core i7-7740K and "Basin Falls" Platform at E3
Intel's immediate answer to AMD's Ryzen challenge, the Core i7-7740K processor and "Basin Falls" platform, could launch on the 12th of June, 2017. Intel is the main sponsor of the PC Gaming Show hosted by PC Gamer magazine, in the backdrop of E3-2017, and we expect it to launch its first product, the Core i7-7740K on the occasion. Intel could announce retail availability of the chips immediately after. The Core i7-7740K launch will be accompanied by a more cost-effective Core i5-7640K, and the X299 Express chipset. Motherboard vendors could announce their first waves of socket LGA2066 motherboards based on this chipset.
Built on the 14 nm "Kaby Lake-X" silicon, the Core i7-7740K is a quad-core processor featuring higher clock speeds than the current i7-7700K. It features a dual-channel integrated memory controller, and lacks integrated graphics. It could feature a 28-lane PCI-Express gen 3.0 root-complex. The only ace up its sleeve is the X299 platform itself, which could be ready for bigger six-, eight-, and ten-core processors with more PCIe lane budgets.
Source:
PC Gamer
Built on the 14 nm "Kaby Lake-X" silicon, the Core i7-7740K is a quad-core processor featuring higher clock speeds than the current i7-7700K. It features a dual-channel integrated memory controller, and lacks integrated graphics. It could feature a 28-lane PCI-Express gen 3.0 root-complex. The only ace up its sleeve is the X299 platform itself, which could be ready for bigger six-, eight-, and ten-core processors with more PCIe lane budgets.
38 Comments on Intel Could Launch Core i7-7740K and "Basin Falls" Platform at E3
kaby lake x is awesome imagine CPU at 4-core with 5.5gHz surely perfect for gaming. I think new gaming modes like virtual reality will be more aggressive with these.
Intel X299 may loss native USB 3.1 that coming with those Intel 300 chipset platform.
They have cutting down the L3 cache size from Core i7 level to Core i5 level ( Cut L3 cache size per core from 2MB to 1.5MB each ) for saving their manufacture cost but charge off full Core i7 price tags. This is the most disappoint CPU design. Lack of Intel AVX-512 or new instructions.
We must call its Core i5 Extreme better. Cheap on intel design.
There's a reason Intel is no longer doing Computex - they have nothing to show that won't just embarrass them.
For the enthusiasts and those that need the cores then there are options as well but I don't see the i3 going away anytime soon.
imo more cores is just a temporary fix for right now anyway. The future is going to be using some material other than silicon to reach what looks like impossibly fast CPU speeds right now. How about an i3 running at 20 GHz? The day is coming when even that will be taken for granted.
If they manage to launch some 6/12 or 8/16 with kaby lake's IPC and single-threaded performance (gaming especially) and price it around 1700/1600x and contain platform prices they're done, it's not that hard to do, it's actually pretty easy.
Intel has always been a more silent company compared to AMD, even when their products were sandy bridge level.
Then take the fact that there are media tasks where a stock Ryzen 1700 can match a Core i7-6900K (same thread count, Intel running at a higher clock speed) and there's no denying the power of Ryzen.
Intel has no plans in place to beat Ryzen outright or on a price/performance aspect for at least the next year.
Add to that how SR3 steamrolls all Xeons in the same power envelope and/or price bracket and things don't look stellar for Intel.
That being said, Intel will not lose a significant market share - that I can absolutely guarantee you. They have tricks up their sleeve (which are blindingly obvious if you think about it) to ensure market domination regardless of their price or performance.
That shows, in some games, a Ryzen 1700X at 4 GHz beating a Core i7-7700K at stock 4.4 GHz, and in some cases beating (slightly) a Core i7-7700K at 5 GHz. All tests were run at least three times with restarts between each. That's not true. Even priced the same as the Intel equivalent you're getting better performance. Media benchmarks are a dime a dozen showing Intel's only desktop chips capable of beating it are (and not even 100 % of the time - there are exceptions where the Ryzen comes out on top) the i7-6950X and i7-6900K.
www.kitguru.net/components/cpu/luke-hill/amd-ryzen-5-1500x-4c8t-cpu-review/all/1/
Hell even the i5 7400 does better in some games and it's being tested at 3-3.5GHz
Why would I trust a rushed review when hours upon hours of hands-on with the chip shows it's better than what reviews make it out to be? And yes, they were rushed. Not one of the zero day reviews include the BIOS updates released two days prior to launch.