no you not understand me. I was saying that soldering process may damage a chip during production, and mean costs for Intel.
And a better paste may not last as long as the one actuality used by Intel.
It's a cost cutting measure for Intel to save a couple bucks. If you save 5 cents on the manufacturing cost per cpu x 1,000,000, you just pocketed yourself a cool 50 grand. No matter what arguments anyone may use to support their decision to use paste rather than solder, that's what truly lies at the heart of the matter. In the plastics factory I work at, I've seen new molds come in that were making exactly the same part as the old mold we were already using... the only difference is the part might be like a few hundredths of an inch thinner. Seems like a silly investment, but when you take the cost of the little bit of material saved by making a slightly thinner part and multiply that by some number in the millions over the lifetime of the mold and you're pocketing quite a bit over time.
Gonna admit. Clock speed on that 8 core i9 is higher than i exspected. This seems then to be possible to have a cpu capable of 5 ghz on all 8 cores then with a little luck, cause i dout all are capable of. Again silicon lottery.
It's already 5GHz turbo. That's probably the max turbo frequency supported by a single core, but still, 5GHz across the board wouldn't be a very far stretch from that. 5GHz is already no stranger to currently existing K series Coffee Lake chips, anyway. Intel is pushing core count and frequency in response to Ryzen.