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翻訳の問題を報告
If ryzen 2 can really compete with Intel on clocks, as it seems they might get close, on top of looking to overtake them on ipc (ryzen pretty much matches them clock for clock already, they just run slower) while offering far more cores for the same price, I'm unsure how Intel will or can react.
I mean, they have 16 core chips, the 9960x, but, it costs 1500 bucks, and for consumers, looks to be matched by the next ryzen chip, like for 400-500 ish, just without the HEDT features of extra pcie lanes, avx 512 and quad channel memory support etc, which, most consumers have no need for outside of professional applications.
So given that Intel already said they are a good year away from 10nm, let alone 7nm (to their share holders!), I don't know how much further they can push the existing socket.
With that said, 5GHz is closing on theoretical max clocks until we see a big break through (likely with graphene replacing silicon) , atleast under normal cooling methods, so it's not like a 9900k will suddenly be put of date any time soon, unless you insist on being on the cutting edge.
Edit.
So, I don't know if they can squeeze much more onto the existing socket before they need to update if for no other reason than to fit more cores into the available area.
So, yeah, I guess we'll see what Intel can or will try to do come computex in June when amd us likely to announce ryzen 2 proper.
It really would be sweet to see AMD pull out something Big to level the playing field and force some competitive progress.
Graphene and carbon nanotubes were already tested at a Whooping 100Ghz clock. That was in 2012 https://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1172958 IBM will aim for 1Thz.
I'm watching for Zen 2 which will be the Threadripper 3xxx series. It will actually be Ryzen 3 not 2, 2 is already out you mean Zen. Ryzen 2 was built on Zen+ same with Threadripper 2xxx series.
Yeah, graphene us the likely future for electronics, just waiting on the viability / yield to be competitive and we'll see some real huge performance gains, until then, we're kind of stuck with bigger silicon, which costs more and more cores, but I wouldn't expect to see any real huge speed gains any time soon unless chillers become standard equipment and are magically power efficient.
Long story short:
INTEL is GREEDY