Quote from: JKM on January 31, 2023, 08:37:38Hingegen könnte die FPGA-AI-Engine beim Phönix zum a** im Ärmel werden, wo AMD mit 29h statt 19h-Video-Akku-laufzeit schon einen Vorgeschmack auf einen FPGA-Vorteil gegeben hat.
The key thing in Phoenix is not some kind of AI, which is already 3 generations behind Intel, but the presence of built-in USB40 ports, a native 8k @ 60fps decoder (VP9 / H265 / AV1). An HDMI 2.1 port (finally, but again, complete silence over its bandwidth - how much is real there?) And DP 2.0, but again halved in bandwidth.
And support for 256GB of DDR5 5600 (128x2) memory, which Intel does not have and is not even in the top 7945HX, on the outdated "5-6 nm" technical process, which for some reason only supports 64GB of memory, which is very strange.
Moreover, Phoenix on the new technical process does not have a pci-e 5.0 bus, unlike the 7x45 series, on the outdated technical process.
AMD has enough madhouse in 2023 ...
Both companies are rushing about in an attempt to maintain demand and doing God knows what in practice, and at the same time, their "new" series really become massive only after 1.5-2 years, when they are no longer of any interest.
We are now discussing processors that will become mass-produced in laptops only at the beginning of 2024. That is, we are discussing a spherical horse in a vacuum.
Obviously, AMD with the Zen4 Phoenix beat the Raptor. But only on paper. That's when it will be massively on paper, as well as 15.6+ models with 6800U/6850U, which we did not wait for in 2022, and in 2023 we are no longer interested in them, then we can have a discussion about who is in charge here.
The main one whose laptops are massively in stores and who buy ...