good to know that 1% vs previous gen don't worth the price difference for now!
in my opinion in 5 years we'll see hardware which will use it proper than now; time and investments .. a lot...
I wouldnt think so. We still havent seen optimizations for NVMe speeds. The difference in boot time, game loading time, ece from NVMe VS SATA is insignificant right now, and that is NVMe 2.0. NVMe 4.0 has tons of speed that simply isnt utilized, and likely wont for some time. For end users, speeds are beyond good enough.
Now for pro use, I see this being much more important, I'm thinking of editing 8k video or loading multiple high rez pictures for editing. But here, the SSD size restriction would be a serious issue.
Basically the only people who might benefit from these new fast drives are 4K video editors.
X570 is completely useless
... but it will sell. People want the best of the best, even if the "older" solution is just as good.
I for one can't wait for 3900X-es to get in stocks here in Europe (nobody has them already, all stores are pre-order or "10+ days delivery" and use it on my "old" X370 board (which I already updated to latest bios and it supports 3000 series just fine !).
I will upgrade it to X570 or X670 when it will actually make sense...
I'm still on X470, with 0 desire to upgrade.
I'm not even bothering with ryzen 3000, seeing as a 4.0 GHz 1700 is, what, 5% slower in games at most?
I wonder if this ryzen system will last longer then my ivy bridge setup did, nearly 6 years of use.