Read more.Could this be the least exciting Core i7 chip of all time?
Read more.Could this be the least exciting Core i7 chip of all time?
Why have they changed the naming convention? This product offers nothing but confusion and is completely underwhelming... A launch for the sake of a launch....
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A laptop chip that can be put in a desktop board then?
Can't say I am going to be doing cartwheels over Iris Pro.
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What we want is a i3 with iris pro at about £100-£120.
Will intel make one.... about as much chance as the UK winning the eurovision song contest.
Which would be competively priced against the A10 7870K, comparing it with an i7 at three times the price is plain ridiculous.
If you exclude gaming but want a high performing CPU for video rendering then the i7 looks decent but how much more decent than a 4790K which is a lot cheaper.
Would love to see what compiler speeds are like on this chip.
Really, the whole thing is a bit meh with a promise of a meh overclock. The stand out feature so far is Winrar, which I never use but seems to love the big cache.
There can't be a market for this. The person who is willing to stick to integrated graphics is probably budget conscious. And if it's a gaming machine they're gonna build, for the price of the intel chip you could get an AMD CPU & discreet card
I think it's fair to consider this a niche product, and it seems that Intel are treating it as such. With 22nm yields being exceptional, and 14nm still developing there was little financial incentive for Intel to move their desktop product stack to 14nm - on the mobile side 14nm opened new posibilities with the Core M, but otherwise whether they sold Haswell or Broadwell there wasn't a great deal in it.
This release fills the niche for a high performance IGP on the Z97 platform, but also acts as a trial run for socketed eDRAM ahead of Skylake. It's hard to see there being much demand though as it's too expensive to really consider as a drop-in upgrade for an existing system, and for a new-build Skylake is just around the corner.
Intel could have been forgiven skipping socketed-Broadwell for the mainstream. Broadwell was a useful step forward for laptops and AIO that rely on IGP performance, but they were already served by the BGA chips. The real-world use scenario for socketed-Broadwell on Z97 is harder to see, but I guess that's why their launch has been so under-the-radar.
Never thought I'd see the day that Intel had the most powerful IGP!
Agree with the other comments that this will have extremely limited appeal though - just way too expensive for the usual target market.
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