- Joined
- May 3, 2010
- Messages
- 1,092 (0.20/day)
- Location
- Essex, England
Processor | Ryzen 5900X OC 5150Mhz |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus ROG Crosshair VIII Formula |
Cooling | Custom EKWB for CPU, VRM's & GPU with 2x 480mm Rads |
Memory | Gskill TridentZ 3600 Mhz C17 |
Video Card(s) | Powercolor RX 6900XT Liquid Devil Ultimate |
Storage | Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB x 2 Raid0 |
Display(s) | MSI Optix MAG272CQR 27 1440p x2 |
Case | Corsair 1000D |
Audio Device(s) | onboard 7.1 HD Audio |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME Ultra 1300w PSU |
Mouse | Logitech G300s |
Keyboard | Logitech G19s |
Software | Windows 10 64Bit |
Benchmark Scores | R20 : 9329 Timespy: 21455 |
Yes you make a good point in that sense. its not baby. But still, upgrading multiple times in the time frame of just 3 years now is pretty exceptional for most users. Not for enthusiasts... but as you can see by the approach of ASUS we're not a big enough group to give two flying *f*s about... And its not the first time, and its not just ASUS either.
More importantly though, do you get my point now? AMD is letting the market push decide whether their promise of support for boards/sockets is ongoing or not. AMD's just saying 'run with whatever you like' apparently, and not 'you must, you shall, provide support like we say'. The latter would be a true move towards customers and not companies. Right now its 'up in the air' and this is a mutually beneficial business decision for AMD and board partners, but not for end users. And AMD can just pass the blame to ASUS (rightly so -mind) but a better agreement with them would be a true solution.
Well hang on here.... that's a LOT of assumptions... AMD has not weighed in on the issue and Asus has not made an official response. For all we know AMD could put pressure on them and this could be news to them.
I understand where you're coming from but you're reaching and speculating a lot. based on one could end up being one 1st line tech guy's wrong response...