Quote from: k on April 16, 2020, 07:11:12Real-life usage does not usually push the components as much as benchmarks do. Synthetic benchmarks serve to give you an idea of what is the maximum potential of the product. A discerning buying decision will balance insights from these benchmarks with overall value, longevity, workflow requirements etc.
so close in benchmark difference is no longer deciding. even 40-50% never is deciding in real time performance. even double the pass-mark creates difference of few fps in actual games for graphics card.its purely arbitrary number. for professional software even trend cannot be predicted by such benchmarks, as they miss on important aspects including but not limited to memory bandwidth etc. what matters now is who offer better value. don't forget that intel had more options and better resale value, whereas AMD better power efficiency, if that matters in high H series processor.
Quote from: John Doe on April 15, 2020, 13:03:16
Because Intel invests a big chunk of those high margins into marketing and incentives to undermine AMD. So, even when AMD has a decent (e.g. mobile 3XXX quad core CPU's) or even great products (e.g. these new mobile 4XXX CPUs), OEMs are not really offering them in their laptops apart from a budget model here and there.
Quote from: Vajra on April 15, 2020, 13:17:20Reviews of these notebooks are under way, which will include all those test results. This has been indicated in the article.
A good article should include also how much power the new cpus draw in Full load, because we are speaking about laptop cpus and the max W power draw is very important.
Quote from: toven on April 15, 2020, 11:52:45
Am I looking at 3000US 17" laptop vs 1300US 14" comparing benchmark? Why are these 5 year old tech still selling at a premium high margin price then.
Quote from: fdsofldmos on April 15, 2020, 11:14:50ryzen 3xxx is also nice cpus. outdated 14nm+ but do danm well. we can see is in the recent schenker and matebook models.
Even by today's standards there are nice CPUs. Given they are based on Skylake which was launched 5 years ago, they do damn well, at least from a performance perspective.