kilermachinegun
Power Member
Os frames do 99th percentil são de babar. Mais 30fps que o melhor Ryzen, tá visto o que comprar para quem precisa de high refresh gaming
Vi algumas notícias ( por alto ), que a Intel irá cortar preços até 50% entre as 7 e a 9th gen, isto é verdade ? Estou neste momento sem computador, e estava a pensar virar-me para o r5 2600 mas se o 9400f por exemplo baixar bastante o preço é algo bastante competitivo.
Se vier a confirmar-se, para quando esta medida ?
têm de se desenrascar...a lei assim o exige..se a Intel não cobra provavelmente as lojas têm de arcar com a despesa de devolver o dinheiro se avariar entre o 1º e o 2º anoParte curiosa , 1 ano de garantia XD como é que as empresas tugas vão dar 2 anos de garantia ?
Deve ter um belo nivel de degradação ... não sei se sou só eu mas tirar 2 anos de garantia a um produto para vender ao preço q o vão vender é o mesmo que mandar 2 tiros nos pés
Parte curiosa , 1 ano de garantia XD como é que as empresas tugas vão dar 2 anos de garantia ?
sim e em muitos países asiáticos tb...por cá são dois anos e as marcas têm de cumprir isso alterando ali o meu comentário de há um bocado que caía sobre as lojas, pensando melhor as marcas tb devem ter de prestar essa garantiaAs leis de garantias não são iguais em todo o lado. Nos Estados Unidos acho que o obrigatório é apenas 1 ano. Pelo que sei, 1 ano é o normal por aqueles lados.
As leis de garantias não são iguais em todo o lado. Nos Estados Unidos acho que o obrigatório é apenas 1 ano. Pelo que sei, 1 ano é o normal por aqueles lados.
Isso, obviamente, não se aplica do lado de cá do oceano.
https://newsroom.intel.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2019/11/intel-supply-letter-customers.pdfNovember 20, 2019
To our customers and partners,
I’d like toacknowledgeand sincerely apologize for the impact recent PC CPU shipment delays are havingon your businessand tothankyoufor your continued partnership. I also want to update you on ouractions and investments toimprove supply-demand balanceand support you with performance-leading Intel products. Despite our best efforts, we have not yet resolved this challenge.In response to continued strong demand,we have investedrecord levels of Capexincreasing our 14nm wafer capacity this yearwhile also ramping10nm production. In addition to expanding Intel’s own manufacturing capability, weare increasingour use of foundriesto enable Intel’s differentiated manufacturing to produce more Intel CPU products.The added capacity allowed us to increase oursecond-half PC CPU supplyby double digits compared with the first halfof this year.However,sustained market growthin 2019 hasoutpacedour effortsand exceeded third-party forecasts. Supply remainsextremely tightin our PC business where we are operating withlimitedinventory buffers. This makes us less able to absorb the impact of any production variability, whichwe have experienced in the quarter.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/dell-reports-rosy-profit-corporate-213011754.htmlAdjusted sales will be $91.8 billion to $92.5 billion for fiscal year 2020, Dell Chief Financial Officer Tom Sweet said Tuesday during a conference call with analysts. The company said in August that revenue would be $93 billion to $94.5 billion in the fiscal year ending in January.
Intel said last week it’s facing challenges delivering components to customers because of tight supply and limited chip inventories. Sweet said the development will affect Dell’s ability in the current period to produce some commercial computers for corporate clients, which is a key market. Business purchases of Dell’s PC often spur the sales of additional products and services, generating a higher profit margin.
The company also continues to contend with falling demand for servers amid geopolitical and trade tensions. Weaker sales in China and among large corporate clients led a 16% decline in third-quarter revenue from servers and networking gear.
“Obviously we’re not extraordinarily happy with them right now,” Sweet said about Intel in an interview. “I don’t have a pathway to mitigate the supply constraints that they’ve given me for Q4.”
HP Inc. HPQ, -0.97% and Dell Technologies Inc. DELL, -5.34% both admitted Tuesday that they expect a negative impact on their future results as a result of chip shortages for which Intel apologized last week. Dell laid bare that the chip giant’s shortages have gotten worse, an issue that was not clear in the apology, since Intel INTC, -0.75% reiterated its stronger-than-expected guidance for the fourth quarter.
“Intel CPU shortages have worsened quarter-over-quarter, the shortages are now impacting our commercial PC and premium consumer PC Q4 forecasted shipments,” Dell Vice Chairman Jeff Clarke said in an earnings conference call Tuesday afternoon.
Dell cut its forecast for fiscal 2020, which includes two months in the current calendar fourth quarter, typically the industry’s busiest quarter of the year, thanks to holiday shopping. Dell stock took a hit, falling from slight gains to a decline of 4% in after-hours trading.
HP’s PC business had revenue growth of 4% in the fiscal fourth quarter reported on Tuesday, which was slightly ahead of the industry growth rate, but HP said the supply shortages will “constrain” its sales in the current quarter, which will include two months of the holiday shopping season
“So we are assuming that the CPU supply will constrain our revenue in Q1, and if you think about it on a sequential basis, certainly in the personal systems business, we would expect to have declines from Q4 to Q1 above the normal seasonal patterns,” Steven Fieler, HP Chief Financial Officer, said in response to an analyst’s question. “That being said...this is more of a revenue impact than profit impact for the quarter, as we expect our mix should be better.”
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/i...n-dell-and-hps-christmas-stockings-2019-11-26