Anyone else hyped for coffee?

anyone else hyped for coffee?

AMD IS FINISHED

>15% improvement from Skylake to Kabylake
We all know this didn't happen.

>15%
So 1,5% improvement just like Kaby Lake, nice.

>,
this is not a european board

lmao this

this graphic is about mobile chips

but in the small writing at the bottom it says based on windows desktop

>still on 14nm
Just fuck my yields up senpai

>announced Process-Architecture-Optimization release schdule
>throw it out the window less than a year later

What did Intel mean by this?

anything below 14nm is a meme on silicone.

meme is a funny way to say 'causes quantum tunelling'

Kek

>AMD threads nothing but shills and trolls shitting everywhere
>Intel thread .. crickets

Yup. Intel has this in the bag. Can't wait for another pointless rehash, megahurtz bump with shitty TIM keeping thermals in the 80+ range while they're staring down at Zen+ improving on all the issues Zen had.

It's desktop as in Window's benchmarks that aren't UWP or RT
And desktop as in AIO built with laptop parts
Zen+/zenver2 promises up to a 15% IPC increase, and the project lead said that things that didn't made it into Zen like 256 bit FPU and even AVX512 support would be present

This

Waiting for new ayymd APU, so i don't care.

Will the fix the desktop chipset having zero fucking pcie lanes and dual channel memory?

is moores law finally kill?

The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors says that the end is in 2020, at 5 nm. I think it'll take longer than 2020 to get there though, and there'd barely be any performance improvements.

pinnacle ridge when?
i'll let all you cucks be the beta testers for this new arch and catch it once hbm and pcie4 are out

I'm with you on this, it's going to be in double digits until 2020+ for desktops at least.

...

Have u ever been so shrunk that you shrunk your shrunk and then took that tiny shrink and shrank it some more

It says "better performance"

so it's just clocked higher again

when will we reach the post silicon era?

"Advancing Moore's law on 14nm"

I thought Moore's law was the transitor count doubling every so years. So how can it be advanced on the same process?

>hyped for burning money
Yeah totally ...

I guess if you oc to 10ghz on 5v, the effects of quantum tunnelling wont be that noticeable. Its the future. The electrons will appear elsewhere in your room.

>15%

I think it's just using it as a buzzword and meaning performance

>on SysMark
lmao

so intel thinks overclocking a cpu from the factory counts as a "15%" increase?