However your explanation doesn't make sence mathematically.
Because 0.69 only means 0.69 or 69% , it doesn't mean 31%
Uh ... percentages are relative. Relative to something else. If you're talking time to finish a job, and your baseline is 100%, then a result of 69% is indeed 31% faster. If, on the other hand, you redefine the baseline to be your new result, then that old 100% result becomes 145% of that, making it 45% slower.
What you're doing here is attempting to redefine the base variable from "time elapsed" to "jobs performed". This is an explicit reversal of what was presented.
I suggest you check #87 to see how to calculate "Who is faster" which is a "bigger is better" scale.
....did you miss the part where I quoted that post directly? Also, that post entirely fails to explain this supposed point.
The thing is
You need to calculate the "Speed" of the process.
You're confusing speed with rate. In this case, speed is time per job, rate is jobs per time.
Dividing both time doesn't give you the speed
"Distance / time" gives you the speed.
... there is no "distance" here, except metaphorically. But let's go with that metaphor: the "distance" is a single Blender render. That makes
speed "how quickly do you finish one render?", not "how many renders/time are you capable of". The latter question asks for a rate, not a speed.
Except that your maths fail to understand the questions being asked, and are thus being misapplied.
I did find her wording on AM4 during the presentation interesting.
AMD AM4 socket is not going anywhere yet AMD next-gen AM5 platform might have just been unveiled at Computex, but AMD is not saying goodbye to AM4 just yet. The AM4 socket has been a great success for AMD and consumers, especially those on the first gen 300-series motherboards, which have just...
videocardz.com
Hm, that's indeed interesting. Though most likely she's just referring to the fact that the platform will be supported for quite a while yet - i.e. CPUs aren't being discontinued immediately, nor will AM4 be aimed at a full-stack replacement any time soon. I could also see OEMs and business partners continue making AM4-based products for low cost markets, entry business PCs, etc. that don't need the fast I/O or extreme performance of AM5 - especially given how AMD doesn't have Intel's massive chipset tier list with delineations of PCIe generations, DDR support, etc. Still, there's always the potential of that meaning 6nm AM4 refreshes (even if only for OEM markets) down the line, as that should be pretty cheap and easy for them to make.