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Intel Ivy Bridge-E Pricing Leaked

 
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 PostPosted: Thu Aug 01, 2013 8:00 am    Post subject: Intel Ivy Bridge-E Pricing Leaked Reply with quote Back to top

<p align="center"></p><p><p>
Yesterday VR-Zone leaked information on the initial pricing expected for Ivy Bridge-E (IVB-E) processors, which we&rsquo;ve reproduce in the table below. The LGA-2011 platform is an interesting departure from the norm for consumers, so we also wanted to discuss what&rsquo;s happening there and why we&rsquo;re only seeing IVB-E launch <em>after</em> Haswell just came out. But first, let&rsquo;s start with a discussion of pricing; we&rsquo;ve included the existing Sandy Bridge-E (SNB-E) as well. (Note that it appears the image from VR-Zone has incorrect Turbo Boost clocks for the IVB-E parts; we provided earlier estimates last month.)</p>
<table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td align="center" class="contentwhite" colspan="8">
<strong>Ivy Bridge-E Leaked Pricing and Specs</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>SKU</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-4960X</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-3970X</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-3960X</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-4930K</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-3930K</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-4820K</strong></td>
<td>
<strong>i7-3820</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>Cores/Threads</strong></td>
<td>
6/12</td>
<td>
6/12</td>
<td>
6/12</td>
<td>
6/12</td>
<td>
6/12</td>
<td>
4/8</td>
<td>
4/8</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>Speed/Turbo (GHz)</strong></td>
<td>
3.6/4.0</td>
<td>
3.7/4.0</td>
<td>
3.5/3.9</td>
<td>
3.4/3.9</td>
<td>
3.2/3.8</td>
<td>
3.7/3.9</td>
<td>
3.6/3.8</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>L3 Cache</strong></td>
<td>
15MB</td>
<td>
15MB</td>
<td>
15MB</td>
<td>
12MB</td>
<td>
12MB</td>
<td>
10MB</td>
<td>
10MB</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>TDP</strong></td>
<td>
130W</td>
<td>
150W</td>
<td>
130W</td>
<td>
130W</td>
<td>
130W</td>
<td>
130W</td>
<td>
130W</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<strong>Price (Online)</strong></td>
<td>
$990</td>
<td>
$1,059

($1,030)</td>
<td>
$1,059

($1,070)</td>
<td>
$555</td>
<td>
$594

($570)</td>
<td>
$310</td>
<td>
$305

($300)</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>
There are a few interesting takeaways this round. First, pricing on the IVB-E parts is mostly lower than the SNB-E SKUs they&rsquo;re replacing. We expect IPC to be slightly better on IVB-E thanks to architectural enhancements, so in general we&rsquo;re looking at improved performance at lower prices. The 4820K is the exception, priced $5 more than the 3820. IVB-E also reduces the TDP on the highest performing 4960X part to 130W, which makes sense considering the process shrink.</p>
<p>
Something else to note is that the upcoming i7-4820K is also priced quite a bit lower than i7-4770K (and even i7-3770K). If you&rsquo;re not worried about Intel&rsquo;s iGPU solutions&mdash;which is likely the case if you&rsquo;re considering LGA-2011&mdash;the price point is now even lower, and you still get quad-channel memory and additional PCIe 3.0 lanes. Even the LGA-2011 motherboards are priced relatively competitively these days, at least for the mainstream models&mdash;LGA-1150 boards with four DIMM slots and at least two PCIe 3.0 slots are only $20-$40 cheaper, and the higher quality offerings can even surpass pricing for LGA-2011 boards.</p>
<p>
The more interesting discussion is what we&rsquo;re not seeing. For one, there&rsquo;s still no inexpensive hex-core solution; you either spend $555 or more, or you get a quad-core part. Considering the process shrink, IVB-E chips should be quite a bit smaller and therefore less expensive for Intel to manufacture relative to SNB-E, and while reduced pricing is nice many were hoping for a budget hex-core processor.</p>
<p>
The other item we won&rsquo;t see (which isn&rsquo;t in the above table) is new chipsets/motherboards for Ivy Bridge-E. Oh, there will likely be a few new boards, but this isn&rsquo;t a new platform launch. IVB-E should be a drop-in replacement for SNB-E with a BIOS update, and all of the Tier-1 OEMs are promising support for the new processors. But if you already have SNB-E, will IVB-E be enough of an upgrade to justify the expense of a new processor? We&rsquo;ll have to wait for the official launch for that discussion, but at least right now that&rsquo;s looking like a tough sell.</p>
<p>
The question most people have with IVB-E is why it even exists in the first place&mdash;SNB-E launched after IVB on the consumer side and over a year after SNB showed up, and with Haswell having just come out we&rsquo;re still a month or more away from IVB-E. Shouldn&rsquo;t we be looking for Haswell-E instead? The answer is actually a lot less complex than you might suspect, and it goes along with the lack of new motherboards/chipset. LGA-2011 is basically the consumer version of Intel&rsquo;s Xeon platform; nothing more, nothing less. Oh, you get unlocked CPU multipliers and motherboards targeted more at the enthusiast market (frequently with tons of overclocking options), and you don&rsquo;t need ECC memory, but LGA-2011 is just a minor tweak to the single-socket Xeon offerings.</p>
<p>
Unlike the desktop world where yearly upgrades are common and even encouraged by the manufacturers, Xeon plays in a different market that doesn&rsquo;t like rapid change. The server cadence from Intel is two generations of support, so each new platform stays around a lot longer. Bringing in Haswell-E would require moving to a new socket, violating the every socket has to stick around for two generations requirement in Xeon-land. So we're stuck with Ivy Bridge for the next year, with Haswell-E likely showing up in late 2014. Paraphrasing what we said back at the Sandy Bridge-E launch: If you happen to have a heavily threaded workload that needs the absolute best performance, it looks like Ivy Bridge-E can deliver. Professional overclockers are also likely to be thrilled that IVB-E should take care of the cold boot bugs seen on other platforms. But for many users, the new Haswell platforms are likely to be more compelling.</p>
<p>
What's going to be in your next build? Are you waiting for Ivy Bridge-E or is a quad-core Haswell more than enough? Or is there something else entirely?</p>
</p>

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Source: AnandTech
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