- Joined
- Jan 14, 2019
- Messages
- 12,334 (5.80/day)
- Location
- Midlands, UK
System Name | Nebulon B |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSi PRO B650M-A WiFi |
Cooling | be quiet! Dark Rock 4 |
Memory | 2x 24 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4800 |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT 12 GB |
Storage | 2 TB Corsair MP600 GS, 2 TB Corsair MP600 R2 |
Display(s) | Dell S3422DWG, 7" Waveshare touchscreen |
Case | Kolink Citadel Mesh black |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech Z333 2.1 speakers, AKG Y50 headphones |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime GX-750 |
Mouse | Logitech MX Master 2S |
Keyboard | Logitech G413 SE |
Software | Bazzite (Fedora Linux) KDE |
I agree again.I respect that not everyone likes Win 11, but 11 in 2023 is very different from the absolute animal that launched in fall 2021. If you're willing to be a bit of a power user there are tools like NTLite that you can use to bend 11 to your liking.
At the end of the day I don't see not having the X3D optimizations as a big deal.
7800X3D is the everyman's SKU, and requires none of these novel scheduling tricks - it's just a new 5800X3D.
The hardships that come with 7900X3D/7950X3D are the result of wanting to have your cake and eat it too (Vcache + more cores). Not wanting to lose to Intel in any metric at the top end.
For people benching all-core, the 7950X is probably still going to walk all over those two, 16 cores that aren't hobbled by a silicon insulator. And for pushing DDR5 clock, it's still the 1CCD parts that will lead. I hope the AGESA team gets their shit together but I don't see the 2CCD Vcache parts being anything other than a hassle.
To be fair, the only target audience I can imagine for the 7900/7950X3D is people who game and work at the same time, which is not many, I suppose.
Some of us are used to chasing the highest of the high-end for gaming, which isn't only unnecessary, but also counter-productive ever since AMD's chiplets and Intel's E-cores arrived.
The old belief that usefulness and price are correlated needs to change to buying parts that are fit for purpose. 1 CCD for gaming, 2 CCDs for work.
I'll have a look at NTLite, thanks. Can you customize telemetry options with it?