Monday, October 7th 2019

Intel Marketing Tries to Link Stability to Turbo Boost

There is no correlation between CPU frequency boosting behavior and system stability. Intel today launched its "10th generation" Core X HEDT processors, with core-counts ranging between 10 to 18, priced between $590 and $978. Based on the 14 nm "Cascade Lake-X" silicon, these chips have the same exact IPC as "Skylake" circa 2015, but offer nearly double the number of cores to the Dollar compared to the 9th generation Core X series; and add a couple of useful instruction sets such as DLBoost, which accelerates DNN training/building; a few more AVX-512 instructions, and an updated Turbo Boost Max 3.0 algorithm. The chips offer clock-speed bumps over the previous generation.

Intel's main trade-call for these processors? Taking another stab at AMD for falling short on boost frequency in the hands of consumers. "The chip that hits frequency benchmarks as promised, our new #CoreX -series processor, provides a stable, high-performance platform for visual creators everywhere," reads the Intel tweet, as if to suggest that reaching the "promised" clock speed results in stability. AMD was confronted with alarming statistics of consumers whose 3rd generation Ryzen processors wouldn't reach their advertised boost frequencies. The company released an updated AGESA microcode that fixed this.
Source: Intel (Twitter)
Add your own comment

28 Comments on Intel Marketing Tries to Link Stability to Turbo Boost

#26
Crackong
Intel should check their CPU's PL2 numbers before giving this laughable announcement.
Posted on Reply
#27
Tartaros
They need to come around a way to shrink their manufacturing process already, at this point I can't really understand what is holding them back when everyone is jumping on 7nm. This is a book example of marketing strategy beyond pity.
Posted on Reply
#28
cucker tarlson
evernessinceYou do realize people can use X370, X470, B450, and B550 motherboards with Ryzen 3000 series CPUs right? Apparently not or else you would not have made this comment.

X570 is for those that need PCIe 4.0. Last I checked, Intel doesn't even have a competing product. It's funny, are we now resorting to apples to oranges comparisons when Intel can't win in performance, price, power consumption, or features?
yes I do.

www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/x370-fatal1ty-professional-vs-cheapest-x570-for-ryzen-3000.259523/#post-4122342


it's them who don't.
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
May 6th, 2025 11:50 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts