- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 5,147 (0.75/day)
- Location
- AZ
System Name | Thought I'd be done with this by now |
---|---|
Processor | i7 11700k 8/16 |
Motherboard | MSI Z590 Pro Wifi |
Cooling | Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4, 9x aigo AR12 |
Memory | 32GB GSkill TridentZ Neo DDR4-4000 CL18-22-22-42 |
Video Card(s) | MSI Ventus 2x Geforce RTX 3070 |
Storage | 1TB MX300 M.2 OS + Games, + cloud mostly |
Display(s) | Samsung 40" 4k (TV) |
Case | Lian Li PC-011 Dynamic EVO Black |
Audio Device(s) | onboard HD -> Yamaha 5.1 |
Power Supply | EVGA 850 GQ |
Mouse | Logitech wireless |
Keyboard | same |
VR HMD | nah |
Software | Windows 10 |
Benchmark Scores | no one cares anymore lols |
So basically the consumer CPUs and higher end server CPUs are going to have faster cores,lower power consumption and perhaps more cores too(at least for the server versions).
Edit!!
The following is an Intel roadmap which was recently leaked.
http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2011/04/2011-intel-roadmap.jpg
It looks like Ivy Bridge is to be released in 1H 2012. This would mean it could be up to a year away.
the intel Xeon E7's are already out on lga 1567 with up to 10 cores/20 threads, and 30MB cache.
http://www.avadirect.com/product_details_parts.asp?PRID=20533
ivy bridge is a mainstream target, any xeons based on those will be the desktop swapout versions. Similar to the lga 775 based xeons were. So imo those aren't real xeons.