Quote from: Sammy0310 on October 21, 2020, 09:03:18
AMD Ryzen 4500/4700 CPU series are great, but on a thin chassis like my Lenovo T14s, they run extremely hot (markedly hotter than the equivalent Intel CPUs) which impacts performance from thermal throttling. That's why I'm returning the T14s. I can understand Dell avoiding those CPUs since the thermal issues on the even thinner XPS 13 chassis would be even worse, especially since the generally cooler Intel CPUs already have thermal issues in the XPS 13. So it's not only about power; thermals are a major consideration too!
Quote from: Sammy0310 on October 21, 2020, 09:03:18
AMD Ryzen 4500/4700 CPU series are great, but on a thin chassis like my Lenovo T14s, they run extremely hot (markedly hotter than the equivalent Intel CPUs) which impacts performance from thermal throttling. That's why I'm returning the T14s. I can understand Dell avoiding those CPUs since the thermal issues on the even thinner XPS 13 chassis would be even worse, especially since the generally cooler Intel CPUs already have thermal issues in the XPS 13. So it's not only about power; thermals are a major consideration too!
Quote from: Sammy0310 on October 21, 2020, 09:03:18Do you mean power in terms of speed, or power in terms of power consumed? Because they're different things, and at the same level of power consumption (and thus heat output) Renoir was faster than Ice Lake and similar to Tiger Lake at the same TDP. In other words, you'd have the exact same heat issues with the same design of laptop if it had an Intel CPU in it. Objective tests on this site bear that out.
I can understand Dell avoiding those CPUs since the thermal issues on the even thinner XPS 13 chassis would be even worse, especially since the generally cooler Intel CPUs already have thermal issues in the XPS 13. So it's not only about power; thermals are a major consideration too!
Quote from: Rhi ma on October 20, 2020, 17:55:20
Let's talk facts please. Your only talking point is a geometric mean of tests. Lol. What the hell is that? Please do rigorous testing to tell me as an average consumer, who doesn't use cinebench type movie encoding why should I need Ryzen.
Quote from: vertigo on October 20, 2020, 01:58:07I've been needing a laptop for months, I would say a year. Disappointed by comet lake and ice lake, ended up buying the latest tiger lake laptop. I searched for months for a ryzen laptop, but it was near impossible to get and the ones that were available, the specs were not up to what I needed (mainly all with 8GB of ram no expandable, or screen being total crap). At least thanks to ryzen I managed to get an intel equivalent for similar price.Quote from: kek on October 19, 2020, 23:32:02
Here comes AMD fanboys to say Intel is doomed when even AMD has not enough stock to take over the laptop market.
Also, XPS with AMD will probably never happen. Intel has XPS on that Evo program thing.
AFAIK, it's not an issue of stock, it's an issue of OEMs still putting out far, far more Intel laptops than AMD ones, and the AMD ones they do release are typically held back by crappy displays and other issues. The reason Intel is in trouble is because their just released, brand-new, supposed to be amazing chip is still only slightly better than AMD in graphics benchmarks while so far showing to actually be worse in actual gaming and definitely slower on the CPU side. Meanwhile, AMD is very close to revealing their new chip to compete with Tiger Lake, even though that doesn't seem necessary at this point, and, if it's even close to expectations, it will mean another year of AMD being a better performer, not to mention at a lower cost, than Intel, possibly at an even wider margin than this past year. The current situation is very similar to the Athlon 64 period years ago, which put Intel behind for several years. Any loss of market share is going to make it harder for them long-term, not to mention the loss of profits. They're far from doomed, but things aren't looking good for them.
Regardless, it's great because the increased competition is speeding up advancements and making things cheaper, so the consumers win. It's been far too long with Intel reigning supreme and offering overpriced products with minimal improvements from one generation to the next, because they didn't have to be competitive. And I'm not necessarily an AMD "fanboy" (a term that's used as much as an ad hominem attack in attempt to shut down people with differing opinions as it's used appropriately), I don't like Intel, as their success is largely thanks to a history of anticompetitive practices rather than actually providing a better product. That said, AMD isn't innocent in that regard, either, though they aren't as bad.
And since you're probably going to claim that I'm a fanboy, I'll just say that my last several computers--about half a dozen desktops I built myself and three laptops--have been Intel based, with my last use (for my own PCs) of AMD being the Athlon 64 X2. But with things the way they currently are, I'd buy a laptop with Renoir over one even with Tiger Lake, all else being equal, even the price. Hell, I'd probably pay more for AMD than Intel, not because I'm pro-AMD or anti-Intel, but because AMD is just better, period. So before you use the word fanboy, maybe consider that.
Quote from: kek on October 19, 2020, 23:32:02
Here comes AMD fanboys to say Intel is doomed when even AMD has not enough stock to take over the laptop market.
Also, XPS with AMD will probably never happen. Intel has XPS on that Evo program thing.