- Joined
- Feb 19, 2009
- Messages
- 1,165 (0.20/day)
- Location
- I live in Norway
Processor | 9800x3D| 5800x | 4800H | Rog ally |
---|---|
Motherboard | Gb x870 Aorus Elite ice | Asrack x470d4u | Asus Tuf A15 |
Cooling | Air | Air | duh laptop |
Memory | 64gb G.skill SniperX @3600 CL16 | 128gb | 32GB | 192gb |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4080 |Quadro P5000 | RTX2060M |
Storage | Many drives |
Display(s) | AW3423dwf. |
Case | Jonsbo D41 |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850x |
Mouse | g502x Lightspeed |
Keyboard | G913 tkl |
Software | win11, proxmox |
We're talking about 7nm. There are only two 7nm foundries: TSMC and Samsung so your correction makes little sense. And it's very optimistic to expect chiplet designs when we aren't there yet. The rumors are about massive off-die LLC. However you're adding latency when moving things off-die even if they're in close proximity. So consumer designs where Samsung might make sense do not benefit from bandwidth and capacities as much - often low latency is better.
Off die memory access is already done today on TR and Epyc without any Huge concern, it will actually bring latency uniformity to all latencies except cross die L3 cache which will improve AMD's standing in the server space as it will operate with 100% shared memory rather than numa nodes. make it easier to optimize, consistent performance etc.
I see it as a very doable solution.
Latency is a concern and if so it might be a big seller for enterprise but less for gamers.
Lol, I though clever people should attach screenshots with prices from amazon, newegg, cu.de or whatever your local dealer is.
2700X is 329$ in us already. Waiting 350$ in couple of weeks
Prices have dropped well below MSRP in Norway on 2700X.
while 8700K is way up there now.