So the new Intel CPU is actually slower than an older AMD CPU. That's progress, I guess. As for the guy still clinging to 'single-threaded performance is the most important metric for productivity'—he either:
A) Thinks Notepad and Photoshop are the only productivity apps
B) Has a time machine and is posting from 1995.
I'm a software engineer, and I actually pay attention to my CPU usage. In the past 8 years, I haven't seen a workload that uses fewer than 8 threads—even when I'm not running VMs. Even basic development work today, like data processing, compilation, rendering, or containerized workloads, eats up as many cores as you give it. Even with 16 cores, I sometimes feel limited.
In 2025, pretending single-threaded performance is king is just coping. Multithreading has been the standard for years. But hey, Intel has to push that narrative because it's the only thing they have left. It's the same pattern—Intel fanboys convincing themselves their overpriced space heaters are the best, while ignoring decades of bribery, anti-competitive behavior, security flaws, and inefficiency. Meanwhile, AMD keeps winning in real-world performance.
The real question is: how much is Intel paying you?