- Joined
- Jan 11, 2009
- Messages
- 9,250 (1.60/day)
- Location
- Montreal, Canada
System Name | Homelabs |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5900x | Ryzen 1920X |
Motherboard | Asus ProArt x570 Creator | AsRock X399 fatal1ty gaming |
Cooling | Silent Loop 2 280mm | Dark Rock Pro TR4 |
Memory | 128GB (4x32gb) DDR4 3600Mhz | 128GB (8x16GB) DDR4 2933Mhz |
Video Card(s) | EVGA RTX 3080 | ASUS Strix GTX 970 |
Storage | Optane 900p + NVMe | Optane 900p + 8TB SATA SSDs + 48TB HDDs |
Display(s) | Alienware AW3423dw QD-OLED | HP Omen 32 1440p |
Case | be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 rev 2 | be quiet! Silent Base 800 |
Power Supply | Corsair RM750x + sleeved cables| EVGA P2 750W |
Mouse | Razer Viper Ultimate (still has buttons on the right side, crucial as I'm a southpaw) |
Keyboard | Razer Huntsman Elite, Pro Type | Logitech G915 TKL |
Yeah, prior to reading reviews I had no idea the chip itself had 8 cores. It is a little disappointment that they didn't enable all of them. I guess yields are not good at all and they are saving them for Xeons. Something inside me still tells me it's a little trick, in order to have something else to release down the line and charge $1000+ again. It's not like they really need the 8 cores in order to leave both the competition and their own previous generation in the dust.
Maybe it's kind of better this way. While it would have been interesting to see a direct comparison between both 2 billion transistor behemoths (SB-E vs BD), it would have been a bloodbath.
I thought the chips had 6 core and the only disable 2 cores were for the quad???