Quote from: _MT_ on January 28, 2020, 09:35:13most of hardware testing places over the internet are not very good. most has pretty weak methodology. my russian ixbt.com is the best overall. they created their own methodology and even benchmarks with the cooperation with users for dozens of hardware and all other home electronic stuff.
That's why I appreciate that notebookcheck performs throttling and sustained load tests. And you can put a benchmark right after such a load and check the difference (when the laptop is well baked vs. cold). Which leads me to another thing and that is benchmarking laptops primarily connected to a wall. That just doesn't make sense to me. It makes sense for big beasts which are not meant to be used on the go (they're transportable, not mobile). There is no way their battery would be able to keep up anyway. It's a machine you can bring with you to a weekend house instead of packing a desktop, not something you unpack at an airport.
Quote from: _MT_ on January 28, 2020, 09:35:13desktops is a different animal. mostly because you are a creator, its easy to avoid some annoying bullshit from manufacturer. also tdp. for example, fast igpu make sense.
But that doesn't explain his problems with his desktop.
Quote from: william blake on January 28, 2020, 00:23:10Why should a chip maker be responsible for the finished product? Yes, they could motivate such a development. Just as they motivated the development of ultrabooks or what they did with Centrino before that. But they typically only do that with the view to increase sales. As long as we keep buying it, Intel doesn't have to care about the incompetence of manufacturers. And is it really incompetence or conviction that this is what the market wants (what they can successfully push out)? Frankly, there is not a single laptop on the market that ticks all the boxes for me (in the relevant category; obviously, ultrabook won't fill my workstation needs and vice versa). But I'm used to being the minority. I know what I want and I understand the compromises, unlike a typical consumer. Some are close, but all have annoying quirks. The fact that I hate 16:9 aspect ratio and glossy screens doesn't help. :-) What really annoys me is that even workstations can look like the manufacturer doesn't care. It's almost like "it's thick, we don't have to try hard." I don't want to be looking at gaming laptops.
intel is a monopoly for a looong period. so it is exactly intel's fault.
Quote from: _MT_ on January 27, 2020, 20:04:33intel is a monopoly for a looong period. so it is exactly intel's fault.
That's not really Intel's fault.
Quote from: Rico Mico on January 27, 2020, 18:19:58
With this I mean that, with Intel you think you have a good CPU when the reality is something else. They play with bursts and intelligent detection of single/ multi core and reduce speed so that when working the CPU burst for a little while on heavenly speeds until the fall to the real lousy speeds. Also with spectre & Co correction, I lost around 8-12% of speed.
Quote from: Vaidyanathan on January 27, 2020, 07:39:57totally understandable view from a "common persons". if 9 of 10 laptops has intel inside, then laptops are intel inside. nevertheless, laptops are much easier than servers and having a superior products helps a lot with fast growing. as i said previously, amd's 2019 and 2020 mobile lineups are night and day. i expect big changes in mentality of a common person this year :) servers is a sad story, not laptops. right now, corporations are buying pricy, hot and slow intel here and there. and we are talking about really big differencies in product quality. not just slightly but times better. i need some good readings about this situation, i have no idea how it happens. times better but i will buy the worst one-impossible in laptops
I think on a CPU level, things are leveling out and AMD has to be commended here. But I am still wary about what kind of laptops OEMs actually push out. Intel's hegemony can't be discounted all of a sudden. We did see some cool designs at CES and about 100 designs are on the anvil, but for a common person, it is still Intel Inside, at least when it comes to laptops or ultrabooks.
Quote from: william blake on January 27, 2020, 04:51:45Quote from: k on January 27, 2020, 03:52:20kinda common knowledge. but not about technology or products.
firstly, with better brand name and deeper distribution chain, intel is always with premium configuration.Quotesecondly, most light duty software are not mutlithread ready and heavy one's users won't opt for laptop specially U-series processor. so that many thread will in all possibilities not help the laptop.1. light duty software cares if there is 4ghz or 4,5ghz?
2. intel disagreed with you. they are produses up to 8 cores in mobile.
3. higher frequencies-less energy efficient.
4.and finally having extra cores will not hurt you. light-threaded? extra frequency to a couple of cores, idle for the other.Quotethirdly going forward intel is improving on graphics like anything.who cares? do you know a successful integrated graphics which grabbed a market share or made some crazy earnings? igpu is by far the less profitable waste of silicon. half of the chip-200usd cpu, half-20usd igpu. you can always counter any integrated with discrete. even with the same piece of silicon, just adding faster memory and higher frequencies.
and..why do people misses the point about shared power limit? tiger lake is crazy fast and his gpu is crazy fast but both 15w total. how is that possible? in reality-zen 2 is more efficient than intel offerings, and amd or nvidia graphics are more efficient than intel offerings. so where is the trick?
QuoteBut IPC advantage of intel is still main concernmaybe. or mabe not. yep, ice lake is pretty fast. tiger would be 10% faster, due to 10% higher frequencies. and now tell me why there is no gaming or working machine with ice lake?Quoteintel can compete better even if mfg tech is one step ahead like in current case of TSMC vs intel, 10gen intel is still competitive.10 and 7 are marketing names. pretty safe to say that intel's 10nm= tsmc's 7nm https://fuse.wikichip.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/tsmc-intel-xtor-comp-16-10-7.png
also intel's 14nm was clearly better than tsmc's 16 or samsung/glofo 14.
Quote from: k on January 27, 2020, 03:52:20kinda common knowledge. but not about technology or products.
firstly, with better brand name and deeper distribution chain, intel is always with premium configuration.
Quotesecondly, most light duty software are not mutlithread ready and heavy one's users won't opt for laptop specially U-series processor. so that many thread will in all possibilities not help the laptop.1. light duty software cares if there is 4ghz or 4,5ghz?
Quotethirdly going forward intel is improving on graphics like anything.who cares? do you know a successful integrated graphics which grabbed a market share or made some crazy earnings? igpu is by far the less profitable waste of silicon. half of the chip-200usd cpu, half-20usd igpu. you can always counter any integrated with discrete. even with the same piece of silicon, just adding faster memory and higher frequencies.
QuoteBut IPC advantage of intel is still main concernmaybe. or mabe not. yep, ice lake is pretty fast. tiger would be 10% faster, due to 10% higher frequencies. and now tell me why there is no gaming or working machine with ice lake?
Quoteintel can compete better even if mfg tech is one step ahead like in current case of TSMC vs intel, 10gen intel is still competitive.10 and 7 are marketing names. pretty safe to say that intel's 10nm= tsmc's 7nm https://fuse.wikichip.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/tsmc-intel-xtor-comp-16-10-7.png
Quote from: deksman2 on January 26, 2020, 23:47:21pretty much this. intel needs 3 lineups to counter a single chip :)
If those results are actually accurate and not fake... then the 4800U is an excellent competitor for both those Intel chips.
It offers similar enough single threaded performance, coupled with better multithreaded performance in a 15W TDP with 8 cores/16 threads and more powerful graphics.
Given the efficiency of Zen 2 in general along with its availability (which is likely going it be sparse or close to non-existent for Intel due to their 10nm woes), AMD still (in all likelihood) has the advantage.
Also, the fact AMD was able to cram 8 cores and 16 threads into a 15W TDP (which can be configured up to 28W actually and these tests likely show only 15W limit) whereas Intel couldn't, and that it generally stays within its TDP limits while Intel tends to go WAY overboard, I don't think Intel has good competitor here.
And by the time Tiger Lake comes out, it will still have to deal with Zen 3.
Quote
should be? they took the only renoir result available for geekbench.
ok, here is 4800u with dual channel versus peak(!) results from 1065g7 and 10710u
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.
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ice lake with the fastest memory possible, 3733
comet lake with fastest for him 2666, 4+ghz avg(be sure its not 15w)
renoir with 3200, all dual channels.
Quote from: Ed on January 26, 2020, 21:55:48should be? they took the only renoir result available for geekbench.
Isn't this comparison fairly pointless?
Using Intel Top Model's number and Compared to 4700U when it should be 4800U. Using Single Channels which will lower pretty much all results including CPU , Single, Multi and GPU benchmarks.