Mobo & Processor Help

jedi5diah

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it really hard to keep up to date,

am i right to say the 5th gen processor 17 5XXX code number onwards are all LGA 2011 socket?

Thanks

should i still build LGA 1150 system (this is for 4th gen 17 4XXX right?) or its time to jumpship?
 

monikernemo

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it really hard to keep up to date,

am i right to say the 5th gen processor 17 5XXX code number onwards are all LGA 2011 socket?

Thanks

should i still build LGA 1150 system (this is for 4th gen 17 4XXX right?) or its time to jumpship?

No leh bro.

I7 5xxx got LGA 1150 (broadwell) and 2011-v3 (haswell).

Doubt that broadwell is available locally yet.

Haswell is slightly ahead of broadwell, save igpu performance.

Sent from microwave oven using GAGT
 

zenniz

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LGA 2011 is for extreme,rich people,show off,enthusiast user. Their CPU is expensive as hell.

Standard user use LGA 1150.
 

MoneyFace =p

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i7-x8xx and above all enthusiast socket, i7-x7xx and below all mainstream socket.
 

MoneyFace =p

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i saw the x99s mobo ad banner looks like very sud lol... better stick to value for money

thanks!

Skylake-E should give current Haswell-E a run for its money and with potential lower price for DDR4 RAMs.
 

avsquare

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Always does. May hit 10 physical cores.

Hard to tell, and I doubt so at this stage. If we talk about enthusiast chips, go back to 2011, the i7-990X was a 6 core chip. It was until i7-5960X we see a bump to 8 cores.

The reason is simple - Codename-E chips are different target segment from Codename-EP chips. Ultimately, Codename-E chips are enthusiast chips. Power users who really require that number of cores are the target segment of the EP chips which easily offers you 12-16 cores right now.

E chips seeks a balance between performance in terms of clock speeds and the number of cores offered. The higher the number of cores, the more difficult to overclock the chip. Intel is unable to bump it to 10 cores without finding a way to deliver more power to the chip and at the same time, reduce the heat generated by the cores.

Knowing that it was until last year that Intel was able to offer the top E chip a bump to 8 cores, I don't forsee any 10 cores Skylake-E chips at all. However, mid tier chips like the replacement for 5930K might see a bump to 8 cores, maybe
 
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