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Intel launches 6th generation "Skylake" processors

Hamartia Antidote

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Intel launches 6th generation "Skylake" processors

Today, Intel launched its sixth generation iCore processors marking the first commercial versions of Intel’s Skylake processors utilizing a 14 nm architecture to be available on the market.

The two processors released today are the i7-6700K and the i5-6600K, both of which are unlocked desktop processors aimed at PC enthusiasts and gamers who want to have the fastest chip and probably plan on overclocking their CPU.

Engadget is reporting that while the i7-7600K offers a modest 10% increase over the last-gen Haswell i7-4790k, the new 14 nm architecture is rumored to allow owners to overclock their CPU all the way up to 5 GHz.

The new Skylake processors also use the new Z170 chipset, one of the first to support the new and much faster DDR4 generation of RAM.

Engadget also notes that mobile and mainstream CPU’s are absent from today’s launch, but more information will likely be revealed on other Skylake processors at the Intel Developers Forum on August 18th. It might not be until that event, or sometime after, that we get to see the next line of chips that will end up powering the next generation of laptops, 2-in-1’s, and possibly the rumored Surface Pro 4.

Haswell was somewhat disappointing for desktop PC enthusiasts focused on performance, but are you considering upgrading a Skylake processor with DDR4 RAM? Let us know in the comment section below.
 
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I haven't trusted Intel ever since they started undercloking P4. They used this tactic to sell almost the same processor with slightly higher clock speeds until it was discovered later on.

I am still using a 3rd gen i7. 5th gen was a filler the real thing after the 4th is the 6th gen.
1st .. 3rd .. 6th have significant changes imo.
 
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I don't expect significant improvements to performance. Just maybe more robust and stable at handling multithreading with the slight boost. Think the silicides and TSV technology may have been modified over the last gen.

In any case it's all winding down and 28 was the last really profitable node.
 
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Intel launches 6th generation "Skylake" processors

Today, Intel launched its sixth generation iCore processors marking the first commercial versions of Intel’s Skylake processors utilizing a 14 nm architecture to be available on the market.

The two processors released today are the i7-6700K and the i5-6600K, both of which are unlocked desktop processors aimed at PC enthusiasts and gamers who want to have the fastest chip and probably plan on overclocking their CPU.

Engadget is reporting that while the i7-7600K offers a modest 10% increase over the last-gen Haswell i7-4790k, the new 14 nm architecture is rumored to allow owners to overclock their CPU all the way up to 5 GHz.

The new Skylake processors also use the new Z170 chipset, one of the first to support the new and much faster DDR4 generation of RAM.

Engadget also notes that mobile and mainstream CPU’s are absent from today’s launch, but more information will likely be revealed on other Skylake processors at the Intel Developers Forum on August 18th. It might not be until that event, or sometime after, that we get to see the next line of chips that will end up powering the next generation of laptops, 2-in-1’s, and possibly the rumored Surface Pro 4.

Haswell was somewhat disappointing for desktop PC enthusiasts focused on performance, but are you considering upgrading a Skylake processor with DDR4 RAM? Let us know in the comment section below.


I am sure Intel is smart enough to see market potential for these.

However me thinks, pc ear is long over.

processors now should be directed towards home/office servers supporting phablets.
 
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I am sure Intel is smart enough to see market potential for these.

However me thinks, pc ear is long over.

processors now should be directed towards home/office servers supporting phablets.

PC sales peaked in 2011 at -350M/yr sold. The rise of tablets and smart phones has caused a steady decrease and it is now -300M/yr.
 
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nothing radically different architecture-wise... i don't see how this would be different from pentium-4 in multi-core form.

yes, if they make the processor clock-less and make transistors in vacuum-tube form and use the new memory that they were working on, that would indeed by a new generation of processors.

the return of the vacuum tube computer
 
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It has hd 530 graphics which give poor performance compared to hd 5500 on broadwell
Does someone else find this strange?
 
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Damn the time moves forward so quickly, i made a gaming rig back in year 2013 with intel max well 4600K, still running strong, can play any game at 1080p @ 60 FPS with little bit of tweaking, at this point i don't see any point in upgrading processors, how every updating graphic cards is an another story.
 
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