Quote from: Make it Stop on January 04, 2021, 03:27:18Quote from: vertigo on January 04, 2021, 01:10:00Quote from: Make it Stop on January 04, 2021, 00:34:26Quote from: vertigo on January 03, 2021, 20:43:42
I think people are missing the point here. It's not bashing or "hating" on Intel, simply making people aware of a common issue: mid-tier CPUs often outperform their bigger siblings in similar configurations, so potential buyers, i.e. many of the people reading articles here, should be aware of that and think twice before spending the extra money on an "upgrade" that may actually result in lesser performance. It doesn't matter if it's really because of the dGPU's extra heat, this particular laptop performs worse with the more expensive part, and many others have the same problem, which is one of the reasons I personally prefer i5/R5 vs i7/R7 in a laptop. Because yes, this can and does happen with AMD as well. It's the "fault" of both the CPU manufacturer and the OEM, and Dell especially is known for crappy cooling.
People aren't missing the point, they're annoyed that NoteBookCheck has continued to make these articles that contain poor conclusions and click-bait titles.
We don't even know if the more expensive product mentioned here "under performs" the cheaper one, because NoteBookCheck didn't even bother to compare the graphics capabilities between the two. All we know is that by selecting a dedicated graphics card you lose a small amount (~5%) of processing power.
We know it performs worse regarding the CPU, because they show that. We can pretty safely assume a dGPU is going to perform better than an i5's iGPU. Where's the confusion? So if you don't need the extra graphics performance, you're better off spending less and having better CPU performance. If you do need it, then obviously you should get the more expensive option, with the dGPU, but you should know that will cost you some CPU performance despite spending more and getting the better chip. Which is exactly what the article said.
There is no confusion. That's my whole point. No result in the article should be surprising, but NoteBookCheck added the snarky title to get more clicks.
Quote from: vertigo on January 04, 2021, 01:10:00Quote from: Make it Stop on January 04, 2021, 00:34:26Quote from: vertigo on January 03, 2021, 20:43:42
I think people are missing the point here. It's not bashing or "hating" on Intel, simply making people aware of a common issue: mid-tier CPUs often outperform their bigger siblings in similar configurations, so potential buyers, i.e. many of the people reading articles here, should be aware of that and think twice before spending the extra money on an "upgrade" that may actually result in lesser performance. It doesn't matter if it's really because of the dGPU's extra heat, this particular laptop performs worse with the more expensive part, and many others have the same problem, which is one of the reasons I personally prefer i5/R5 vs i7/R7 in a laptop. Because yes, this can and does happen with AMD as well. It's the "fault" of both the CPU manufacturer and the OEM, and Dell especially is known for crappy cooling.
People aren't missing the point, they're annoyed that NoteBookCheck has continued to make these articles that contain poor conclusions and click-bait titles.
We don't even know if the more expensive product mentioned here "under performs" the cheaper one, because NoteBookCheck didn't even bother to compare the graphics capabilities between the two. All we know is that by selecting a dedicated graphics card you lose a small amount (~5%) of processing power.
We know it performs worse regarding the CPU, because they show that. We can pretty safely assume a dGPU is going to perform better than an i5's iGPU. Where's the confusion? So if you don't need the extra graphics performance, you're better off spending less and having better CPU performance. If you do need it, then obviously you should get the more expensive option, with the dGPU, but you should know that will cost you some CPU performance despite spending more and getting the better chip. Which is exactly what the article said.
Quote from: Make it Stop on January 04, 2021, 00:34:26Quote from: vertigo on January 03, 2021, 20:43:42
I think people are missing the point here. It's not bashing or "hating" on Intel, simply making people aware of a common issue: mid-tier CPUs often outperform their bigger siblings in similar configurations, so potential buyers, i.e. many of the people reading articles here, should be aware of that and think twice before spending the extra money on an "upgrade" that may actually result in lesser performance. It doesn't matter if it's really because of the dGPU's extra heat, this particular laptop performs worse with the more expensive part, and many others have the same problem, which is one of the reasons I personally prefer i5/R5 vs i7/R7 in a laptop. Because yes, this can and does happen with AMD as well. It's the "fault" of both the CPU manufacturer and the OEM, and Dell especially is known for crappy cooling.
People aren't missing the point, they're annoyed that NoteBookCheck has continued to make these articles that contain poor conclusions and click-bait titles.
We don't even know if the more expensive product mentioned here "under performs" the cheaper one, because NoteBookCheck didn't even bother to compare the graphics capabilities between the two. All we know is that by selecting a dedicated graphics card you lose a small amount (~5%) of processing power.
Quote from: vertigo on January 03, 2021, 20:43:42
I think people are missing the point here. It's not bashing or "hating" on Intel, simply making people aware of a common issue: mid-tier CPUs often outperform their bigger siblings in similar configurations, so potential buyers, i.e. many of the people reading articles here, should be aware of that and think twice before spending the extra money on an "upgrade" that may actually result in lesser performance. It doesn't matter if it's really because of the dGPU's extra heat, this particular laptop performs worse with the more expensive part, and many others have the same problem, which is one of the reasons I personally prefer i5/R5 vs i7/R7 in a laptop. Because yes, this can and does happen with AMD as well. It's the "fault" of both the CPU manufacturer and the OEM, and Dell especially is known for crappy cooling.
Quote from: Warspite on January 03, 2021, 10:12:49
I like how you compare laptops in uncommon scenarios. Nobody or very few people do renders in C4D. Especially nowadays, when we have cloud farm for cheap. But it is you main test tool. And you make misleading confirmations, ignoring typical scenarious.