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Not even close you say? … So i guess the real question I need to ask you; what does "not even close" mean to you?
You were talking about IPC, and now you show a graph of total performance. Ryzen 7 2700X needs two more cores and boost beyond thermal specifications to come close to the "average performance" of i7-8700K. So, if you knew what IPC were, you'd know AMD have a long way to go to be on par with Intel on IPC.
More like tweak and refine. The original post i was responding to quoted a 4 years figure, which is only true for designing an x86 architecture from scratch, and thats for the x86 core IP design. Once that IP is ready, it is then used as part of the lego like blocks of IP into building SOCs. Building an SOC from current existing IP generally takes 6-12 month, and 8700k doesnt introduce any new fundamental IP that 7700k didn't have. How do you think mobile socs come out with new chipsets every year and only shortly after arm even complete their new cpu core designs/ip.
The time from tapeout to the first engineering sample chip is usually ~4 months for such large dies, then 1-3 cycles of tweaking and waiting is normal before they finally ramp up volume production. This is why the time from a completed design to retail availability is usually 12-15 months, this excludes the time developing the layout of the chip, which anyone knows, takes several months or more on top of that. The development times of GPUs are similar; Vega and Polaris were all 12-14 months. Even the Pascal line had similar timelines, with GP102, GP104 and GP106 taking about 12 months from tapeout to launch, even though they were all just "cut down" versions of GP100.
Vendors are able to release new designs every year because they have multiple products "in flight" at the same time. This is true for desktop CPUs, GPUs and even smaller ARM CPUs/SOCs. By the time the public hear about ARM finishing their next design, their partners have already been participating for 2-3 years in the process of developing it.
Right now Intel are sampling Ice Lake, doing final design of Tiger Lake, designing and simulating Sapphire Rapids and probably planning the next unknown one.
We know AMD have several Zen iterations in progress, and have started on designing "Zen5".
regardless, whether a 6core chip took 1 year or 3, the fact is that it was designed in response (or anticipation) to AMDs new architecture. Think of the last time Intel made a big move. Remember sandy bridge? It was released around the time Bulldozer was supposed to be out. And when bulldozer sucked, intel stagnated and kept us with overpriced 400$+ 4core i7s, which became the new i3s after zen lol. And now intel is touting an 8core mainstream cpu only one year after they finaly moved to 6 cores. So It took 10 years to move from 4 to 6 cores, And now less than 2 years for them move to 8. Again its all thanks to AMD (or good competition in general), its just you're typical free market at play whether you like AMD or not
The fact police has to intervene again; Haswell-E did lower the price of it's six-core i7-5820K, which relatively speaking is one of the greatest price per performance drops we've seen in the recent decade, and this without any real competition from AMD. Haswell-E did also introduce 8-cores to the consumer market, and Broadwell-E introduced 10-cores (at a hefty price). So claiming that Intel has stagnated is blatantly untrue.
You lack a basic understanding of how competition works in technology. Doing any changes to the design takes 1-2 product cycles, so the vendors are limited to the following responses in the
short term:
- Change price
- Disable/enable built-in features
- Realign binning and move products between lineups; e.g. make a consumer version of an enterprise product.
- Tweak clocks (by a few percent)
These are simple facts you need to accept.
That said, I still don't think I'll ever pay for HEDT. But it's nice to read about stuff pushed to the extremes.
Sure, HEDT is certainly not for everyone. And the mainstream lineups offering good 6-cores should provide enough for gamers for several years ahead.
HEDT does however make sense for productive work with one or more of the following requirements:
- More cores
- More memory capacity and/or bandwidth
- Multiple GPUs (for compute)
- Virtualization
etc.
Another aspect which many forget is their upgrade cycle; if they keep upgrading whenever they run into bottlenecks, stepping up to HEDT may result in their machine "lasting" 50-100% longer, which may make it cheaper in the long run (if this applies to them). Buying a new system after ~3 years will often result in replacing all the memory as well, so having longer upgrade cycles can make a difference in total cost.
But ultimately we always have to respect the individual's right to make a decision, even if it's sub-optimal.
Speaking for myself, going HEDT turned out to be a great choice. My 5.5 year old workstation (i7-3930K, 64 GB ram) has been pushed to its limits. In fact, at times I have to resort to multitasking across both this one and my "test machine" (i5-4690K), to offload some web-browsing etc. because I'm running out of RAM. I'm now in the process of evaluating what my requirements for the next 5-6 years…