cadaveca
My name is Dave
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2006
- Messages
- 17,232 (2.53/day)
If HEDT is used by business, it makes more sense to have a single platform with many core choice dependent on user, as this is easier to manage by IT people (which is why many business have all their PC's from one single OEM). It's actually quite the feat to have a CPU that does not have internal voltage regulator and one that does, working in the same socket.If anything I actually see this chip as a negative to Intel in the big picture, since it degrades their HEDT Intel brand. Most here will do a deeper dive, but consumers generally should be able to buy a HEDT chip and assume the bells and whistles that are absent in this chip are there. Or call this one a new name (something other than HEDT or with X in the name), that makes it clear that it's a non-HEDT cpu that just happens to work on the HEDT platform for those limited use-cases.
For the enthusiast/gaming market, sure it doesn't make a lot of sense when 7600K is available, unless you want to buy a platform with some upgrade life, which 7600K does not have, which is also a selling point for business. They can buy one board now, upgrade CPU later to more cores, easily, rather than having to buy two boards. There is saving in that decision that makes a lot of sense to business, given how consumer technology is progressing with VR and such.