Steve from Gamers Nexus explicitly states that they “can’t recommend Intel CPUs right now” until Intel provides information and assurance to customers
Intel what are you doing? Shit’s on fire, yo
Submitted 3 months ago by recursive_recursion@lemmy.blahaj.zone to technology@beehaw.org
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gTeubeCIwRw
Steve from Gamers Nexus explicitly states that they “can’t recommend Intel CPUs right now” until Intel provides information and assurance to customers
Intel what are you doing? Shit’s on fire, yo
tal@lemmy.today 3 months ago
Steve Burke is saying that they’re right about to start their AMD Zen vs Intel benchmarks, and unless Intel releases some kind of explanation, as things stand, since they don’t have a known, definite non-problematic configuration for the Intel CPUs, they’re going to just have to do a “we do not currently recommend buying Intel processors”.
Honestly, what I’d do is just compare against Intel 12th gen chips. Like, yeah, that sucks, but that’s the last definitely-known-good chip that Intel’s put out. You can still buy them, and they’ll work on current motherboards, are LGA1700. Then caveat it with the “if Intel can confirm that some Raptor and Meteor Lake chips are not affected, we can revise this”.
On Passmark, a 14900 is about 46% faster than a 12900 on the multithreaded benchmark, and about 14% faster on the singlethreaded benchmark. It’s slow, but it’s also stable and available.
MDKAOD@lemmy.ml 3 months ago
Yeah, speed doesn’t matter if the chip eats itself within a few weeks after first start up
TehPers@beehaw.org 3 months ago
GN’s charts usually compare against a few gens of somewhat comparable products, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see a 12th gen CPU or two on the charts. I’d also expect to see some 7000 series Ryzen chips and maybe a 5000 series one. I believe they normally include these older gens for people who skipped a gen or two to see what they’d get out of an upgrade.