Processador Intel Coffee Lake ( 2018 )

Então, mas tudo é jogos? :p
Por acaso sempre tive a impressão de o SMT da AMD ser um pouquito mais eficiente que o HT. Um i7 6700 faz mais pontos em cinebench single core que um 2400G, mas depois fica ligeiramente atrás no multithreaded, por exemplo. Provavelmente a AMD tem para lá mais recursos replicados, não sei.
 
Algo não bate certo neste roadmap, 9900k em Q1 2019 e Z390 em Q3 2018.

Intel-Roadmap4.png


Intel-Roadmap8-1024x494.png


Fonte
 
Entretanto, a Asus planeou 19 (!) modelos Z390, o que acho manifestamente exagerado! :)

ASUS Ready with 19 Motherboard Models Based on Intel Z390 Chipset

Maximus XI Hero (and its WiFi sub-variant), Maximus XI Code, Maximus XI Apex, Maximus XI Formula, and Maximus XI Extreme (no Gene, though). The upper-mid tier ROG Strix series includes three ATX models: Strix-E, Strix-F, Strix-H, and the mini-ITX Strix-I, but again curiously, no micro-ATX Strix-G.

The company's mainline Prime series is relegated to just three models: Prime Z390-A, Prime Z390M-Plus, and Prime Z390-P. The cheap entry-level TUF Gaming lineup swelled to five modes: TUF Z390M-Pro Gaming, TUF Z390M-Pro Gaming WiFi, TUF Z390-Plus Gaming, TUF Z390-Plus Gaming WiFi, and TUF Z390-Pro Gaming. There's also the Z390 Dragon
 
Última edição pelo moderador:
Mas porque sempre as threads no novidades tem que sempre que vir os FPS e HZ dos monitores? há vida alem de jogos 100 hz+!

ontopic sff!
 
Não faria sentido darem suporte caso os CPUs não estivessem mesmo já aí a sair o que confirma o lançamento em Q3 de 2018 e não Q1 de 2019
 
Parece que a Geração 9, Coffe Lake refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh refresh (AKA Whiskey Lake), terá um paper launch a 14 de Agosto, com disponibilidade em Q4 de 2018 (Talvez Outubro).

Intel to Paper-launch 9th Gen Core on August 14, Availability in Q4-2018

Intel's client desktop processor lineup is under tremendous pressure owing to competition from AMD, with the company having to roll out entire processor generations over mere 2-3 quarters. You'll recount that Intel was merrily trotting around with its barely-innovative 7th Gen "Kaby Lake" family in early 2017, when AMD stunned the industry with an outperforming product lineup. The 7th generation barely lasted its planned product cycle, before Intel rushed in a pathetic sub-$500 Core X lineup, and the 8th generation "Coffee Lake" with 50-100% core-count increases. Even that is proving insufficient in the wake of 2nd generation AMD Ryzen "Pinnacle Ridge," and Intel is cutting short its product cycle with the 9th generation Core "Whiskey Lake" (or "Coffee Lake" Refresh) series, that further increase core-counts.

"Whiskey Lake" was originally planned for Q1-2019 alongside the 14 nm original Z390 chipset. Intel wasn't expecting AMD to rebound with Ryzen 2000 series (particularly the tangible IPC increases and improved multi-core boosting). And so, it decided to rush through with a new product generation yet again. The Z370 is being re-branded to Z390 (with an improved CPU VRM reference design), and what was originally meant to come out in Q1-2019, could come out by Q4-2018, at the very earliest by October. Intel reportedly planned availability sooner, but realized that distributors have heaps of unsold 8th generation Core inventory, and motherboard vendors aren't fully ready for the chip. Since getting a 9th gen Core chip doesn't warrant a new motherboard, customers would be inclined to pick up 9th generation chip with their existing boards, or any new 300-series board. This would kill the prospects of selling 8th generation Core CPUs.

Intel still wants to make the presence of its 9th generation Core processors felt. And so, at the risk of cannibalizing its 8th generation Core sales, Intel is going ahead with a paper-launch of 9th generation Core on 14th August. You'll have to wait until October not just for availability, but also reviews of these chips. The company is just looking to restore competitiveness at the upper end of its lineup for now, and so its launch will be limited to three SKUs: Core i9-9900K, Core i7-9700K, and Core i5-9600K (detailed in the table below). Of these, the i9-9900K and the i7-9700K are the first 8-core processors by Intel on the mainstream-desktop platform; while the i5-9600K is a 6-core chip that's largely unchanged from the current-generation Core i5 chips. This shows that Intel won't improve its lineup over generation unless absolutely warranted by the competitive environment.

https://www.techpowerup.com/246491/...gen-core-on-august-14-availability-in-q4-2018
 
Back
Topo