
Intel CEO Resigns, B560 RAM Unlocked, 11900K Specs, & Chipset Differences (B560, H570, Z590)
video description
Ditch the greedy concept of multiple grades of chipsets and CPUs, and give all the features to anyone buying your hardware, instead of selling overclocking, ECC-RAM and other old stuff as premium features.. And btw: It all got to be cheaper, too. That's how it's done, when you are Number 2.
Date: 2021-01-14
Comments and reviews: 9
Deimios
I can see it happen:
Hi Steve,
We've reached a critical juncture in the adoption of frequency, and it has gained industry-wide support from top titles, developers, game engines, APIs, consoles, and CPUs. As you know, Intel is all-in for frequency. Ghz is important and core to the future of gaming, but it's also one part of our focused R&D efforts on revolutionizing video games and creating a better experience for gamers. This philosophy is also reflected in developing technologies such as Turbo Boost and Thermal Velocity Boost that offer immense value to customers that are purchasing a CPU. They don't get free CPUs; they work hard for their money and they keep their CPUs for multiple years.
Despite all this progress, your CPU reviews and recommendations have continued to focus singularly on thread performance, and you have largely discounted all of the other technologies we offer gamers. It is very clear from your community commentary that you do not see things the same way that we, gamers, and the rest of the industry do. Our review sample CPUs and other Intel products are being allocated to media outlets that recognize the changing landscape of gaming and the features that are important to gamers and anyone buying a CPU today, be it for gaming, content creation, or studio and stream.
reply
I can see it happen:
Hi Steve,
We've reached a critical juncture in the adoption of frequency, and it has gained industry-wide support from top titles, developers, game engines, APIs, consoles, and CPUs. As you know, Intel is all-in for frequency. Ghz is important and core to the future of gaming, but it's also one part of our focused R&D efforts on revolutionizing video games and creating a better experience for gamers. This philosophy is also reflected in developing technologies such as Turbo Boost and Thermal Velocity Boost that offer immense value to customers that are purchasing a CPU. They don't get free CPUs; they work hard for their money and they keep their CPUs for multiple years.
Despite all this progress, your CPU reviews and recommendations have continued to focus singularly on thread performance, and you have largely discounted all of the other technologies we offer gamers. It is very clear from your community commentary that you do not see things the same way that we, gamers, and the rest of the industry do. Our review sample CPUs and other Intel products are being allocated to media outlets that recognize the changing landscape of gaming and the features that are important to gamers and anyone buying a CPU today, be it for gaming, content creation, or studio and stream.
reply
Eric
I mean you can flag intel what you want about naming their CPUs but at least they can count and have a recognizable naming with their Generation. If you look at nvidia they really messed up after the 10series cards. why not continue 11 12....But rather go 20 16 30....That literally makes no sense. And i Hope AMD gets their naming together with their GPUs too...Those namings are allover the place for years. CPUs have really gotten better and are good in my opinion besides mobile.
reply
I mean you can flag intel what you want about naming their CPUs but at least they can count and have a recognizable naming with their Generation. If you look at nvidia they really messed up after the 10series cards. why not continue 11 12....But rather go 20 16 30....That literally makes no sense. And i Hope AMD gets their naming together with their GPUs too...Those namings are allover the place for years. CPUs have really gotten better and are good in my opinion besides mobile.
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JB
fresh theory directly sourced from my bodies waste disposal shoot
Intels lag behind is of no concern to the company, they have shifted business priorities to national security and 'black budget' technology for the us government. Basically turbo nitrous big brother surveillance state. Feigning this struggle to achieve 10nm is a decent means to cover their dealings and shortcomings.
reply
fresh theory directly sourced from my bodies waste disposal shoot
Intels lag behind is of no concern to the company, they have shifted business priorities to national security and 'black budget' technology for the us government. Basically turbo nitrous big brother surveillance state. Feigning this struggle to achieve 10nm is a decent means to cover their dealings and shortcomings.
reply
w00vZ
The reason for intel still being alive and not losing anything is simple. They always have stock and some people are simply forced to go intel due to stock shortages on ryzen(i am forced to get a 9100f because the 10100f and 3100 and 3300x are all scalped or out of stock). Another reason is because their customers probably have been using their products for a couple generations.
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The reason for intel still being alive and not losing anything is simple. They always have stock and some people are simply forced to go intel due to stock shortages on ryzen(i am forced to get a 9100f because the 10100f and 3100 and 3300x are all scalped or out of stock). Another reason is because their customers probably have been using their products for a couple generations.
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MilSpec_Matt
It s funny, I quoted Intel on Jay s video the other day pointing out their hypocrisy when it comes to benchmarks. The shills came out in troves, mad at me because the company they worship contradicts themselves any chance they get. Meanwhile the AMD fanboys were there as well talking all this ooh-rah AMD bs, when an AMD anything can t be found anywhere...
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It s funny, I quoted Intel on Jay s video the other day pointing out their hypocrisy when it comes to benchmarks. The shills came out in troves, mad at me because the company they worship contradicts themselves any chance they get. Meanwhile the AMD fanboys were there as well talking all this ooh-rah AMD bs, when an AMD anything can t be found anywhere...
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Spartan0536
So let me get this straight, if you want an 11th gen you need Z590 to get all of the latest and greatest stuff? But then they intend to launch their Alder Lake-S 10nm desktop CPU's 6 months later, and with a new LGA-1700 socket?
So what exactly is the point of 11th gen? Sorry AMD kicked my tiny dongle and now I have to compensate?
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So let me get this straight, if you want an 11th gen you need Z590 to get all of the latest and greatest stuff? But then they intend to launch their Alder Lake-S 10nm desktop CPU's 6 months later, and with a new LGA-1700 socket?
So what exactly is the point of 11th gen? Sorry AMD kicked my tiny dongle and now I have to compensate?
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Joey
Saw 10400F at micro center for 140, thought wow that's a good deal and then found out z390 cant work with it for some reason. When those are the only reasonably priced (non enthusiast tier) motherboards available, it really helps them out to have made it compatible with a wider variety of chipset generations. Yes, Intel, plural.
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Saw 10400F at micro center for 140, thought wow that's a good deal and then found out z390 cant work with it for some reason. When those are the only reasonably priced (non enthusiast tier) motherboards available, it really helps them out to have made it compatible with a wider variety of chipset generations. Yes, Intel, plural.
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Ivan
The Apple deal 15 year ago made Intel much too indulgent in lazy iterative technology advancements.
Intel turned their desktop product line of textbook example of planned obsolescence. Hopefully, with Apple switching away from x86 and the pressure from AMD, Intel could find some fresh motivation back to competitiveness.
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The Apple deal 15 year ago made Intel much too indulgent in lazy iterative technology advancements.
Intel turned their desktop product line of textbook example of planned obsolescence. Hopefully, with Apple switching away from x86 and the pressure from AMD, Intel could find some fresh motivation back to competitiveness.
reply
Lietu
The CEO is 100% responsible for all the aspects of the company, even in a large company like Intel .. they need to find competent Vice Presidents etc. for all those areas and manage them accordingly, and promote the kind of culture in the company that makes the necessary things happen.
reply
The CEO is 100% responsible for all the aspects of the company, even in a large company like Intel .. they need to find competent Vice Presidents etc. for all those areas and manage them accordingly, and promote the kind of culture in the company that makes the necessary things happen.
reply
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