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Software | Windows 11 Pro 23H2 |
Look, I don't really care to turn this into an ongoing argument. Just take my point of mentioning it for those interested in higher speed RAM, or not, I don't care, but you ARE being over defensive here. Plus no one's even HAD a chance to bench Ryzen at over 3200 speed yet, so how do you even know what the benefits beyond that are? Clearly you're just trying to defend your purchase of 3200 speed RAM before knowing the results of higher speed after the dividers are released.1: I know you were replying to his specific scenario and in that case you are right however when you turn it into a sweeping generalisation then what I said stands correct all the way from Ryzen 1400-1700. Even then it's likely a small % of 1700x1800x owners who have bought 4000+ RAM which also doesnt work out of the box with some intel combos.
2: see reply below, this is true anything from 2800-3200 is seen as the sweet spot and performance gains are negligible beyond that
3: agreed, it was released a month too early and there should have been better collaboration between AMD and motherboard mfrs to iron out those release day issues and update microcode
This is what I mean by not interested, and not informed. If I say something that doesn't apply to you, just ignore it. Acting all defensive and justified about not being interested in things not even discovered yet is just ludicrous though. And that's without even mentioning that purecain got his 4000 speed at better pricing than the lower speed was in his area.
There's no point to acting like an over defensive fanboy here. His purchase of 4000 was more out of practicality than elitism. Many of us are just eager to see what results are obtained with speeds over 3200 on Ryzen, but I'd rather not speculate like you, and get actual feedback instead. Despite what I say about AMD, I'm only wanting best case scenario so they can actually BE competitive this time around. I mean JEEZ, lay off dude. Time to give it a rest already.
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