- Joined
- Sep 7, 2011
- Messages
- 2,785 (0.58/day)
- Location
- New Zealand
System Name | MoneySink |
---|---|
Processor | 2600K @ 4.8 |
Motherboard | P8Z77-V |
Cooling | AC NexXxos XT45 360, RayStorm, D5T+XSPC tank, Tygon R-3603, Bitspower |
Memory | 16GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3-1600C8 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 780 SLI (EVGA SC ACX + Giga GHz Ed.) |
Storage | Kingston HyperX SSD (128) OS, WD RE4 (1TB), RE2 (1TB), Cav. Black (2 x 500GB), Red (4TB) |
Display(s) | Achieva Shimian QH270-IPSMS (2560x1440) S-IPS |
Case | NZXT Switch 810 |
Audio Device(s) | onboard Realtek yawn edition |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-1050 |
Software | Win8.1 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | 3.5 litres of Pale Ale in 18 minutes. |
Shouldn't be any different to Ivy Bridge vs Sandy Bridge-E (or Sandy Bridge vs Bloomfield before it). Faster single/lightly threaded performance for mainstream desktop where the workload is generally compatible, and more cores/larger cache for heavily threaded workloads for HEDT/WS.I agree with you on the first part, but think about this: where will haswell fit in here?
Niche marketing/free PR, and all purpose machines whose workload spans mainstream apps (gaming, encode, surfing for porn/torrents etc) and workstation. C600/602 (LGA2011 2P) are the current pinnacle of that niche market, but I've still built a few for people that like to combine all their hobbies- gaming and benchmarking for example, with a "working" system (my last two builds were for people involved in stock trading as work/hobby who also worked in 3D design fields...and of course, being "work related" builds managed to claim the build, maintenance cost and depreciation against tax).Because it could end up being almost as fast as the 6 core SB-e (or even Ivy-e), so what's the point of socket 2011 on consumer side?
Other than the workload, everything else comes down to supply and demand.
Pretty much. ROI is obviously going to depend on harvesting salvage parts. That has always been the case with processors, although defective cores argument might also include cores that are out of voltage spec in regard to those adjacent but fully functional.The 6 cores version probably are defective chips (2 locked cores), it's cheaper to produce only one die and then lock the cores (the same way AMD did it).Same thing happened on socket 1366 with Xeons, they had 6 core and 4 core versions built on 32nm and both were from the same die.
FWIW: 32nm Gulftown/Westmere also had a 2-core variant ( 4 inactive cores), the X5698, that was built primarily for high clockspeed and lightly threaded application. From what I understand, the inactive cores weren't defective- just fused off to allow higher frequency of the two active cores. It also retained all other aspects of the 6-core variants (full cache, max QPI etc.)