Tuesday, July 25th 2017

AMD Ryzen Threadripper Retail Packaging Pictured?

AMD CEO Lisa Su, ahead of the company's grand SIGGRAPH event, unveiled what could very well be the retail packaging of the company's upcoming Ryzen Threadripper HEDT processors. There's a good possibility that this isn't the retail packaging, because it looks shaped like an old-school television, and could be a prop AMD is using for its SIGGRAPH booth, or it's a special packaging AMD is reserving for reviewers (the company does that with most of its flagship products).

The rounded cuboid box features a prominent window with a CRT-like convex bulge through which you can look at the large Ryzen Threadripper chip. There's minimal branding or literature on the box itself, which could indicate the presence of an outer cover. AMD is planning to launch its Ryzen Threadripper lineup with two SKUs for the retail (DIY) channel, the 12-core/24-thread Ryzen Threadripper 1920X, and the 16-core/32-thread Ryzen Threadripper 1950X. The two parts will be accompanied by a small but growing selection of compatible socket TR4 motherboards based on the AMD X399 chipset, by industry majors such as ASUS, ASRock, and GIGABYTE. The processor is expected to be available by 9th August.
Source: Tom's Hardware
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27 Comments on AMD Ryzen Threadripper Retail Packaging Pictured?

#26
Komshija
Hugh MungusHardware prices are higher in europe, but euro prices are often not higher than the msrp in dollars. Msrp dollar amount in euros often ends up being the final price in good european stores, unless there are huge shortages.
Final price (the one that consumers will have to pay) also depends on USD-to-Euro ratio, but still you cannot rely on "swapping" currencies while maintaining the base numeric value to assume final hardware prices in Europe.

So far hardware prices in Europe were much more similar to this:
original value in the USA in $ = same numeric value in € + 10%
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#27
Unregistered
KomshijaFinal price (the one that consumers will have to pay) also depends on USD-to-Euro ratio, but still you cannot rely on "swapping" currencies while maintaining the base numeric value to assume final hardware prices in Europe.

So far hardware prices in Europe were much more similar to this:
original value in the USA in $ = same numeric value in € + 10%
Guess we both have our sources, but when prices are reasonable my method of basically swapping msrp dollars and retail euros gets pretty close nowadays. In fact, some products like the 7900x are and were actually a bit LESS. My method becomes less accurate the smaller and further away the company is though, so the lucidsound ls30 costs MORE than a ls40 in Holland, but actual desktop hardware is fairly predictable because companies are big to massive, even coolers seem to follow my "rule".
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