Woop-dee-do another 6-20% speed increase over previous equivalent models (unless you have very specific needs) and with that you have to replace the MB, RAM, and cooling system which effectively kills the upgrade market. Without a competitive AMD there just isn't the imperative for Intel to produce significant improvement.
That's because they're focusing on mobile and power efficiency.The new Intel "consumer" chipsets/CPUs are nice, but barely a real improvement in the last 3 years.
And/or you are <cough> DD <cough> and need the latest/greatest. ;-)
So am I. This 980X is getting old, especially the mainboard RAM and SATA limitations. I see that the octocore CPU is rated much lower than the hexacore, but is that really a limitation if the OC is not that much different? How much better is that Hasbro-E at the same speed (assuming it will reach 4.2) compared to the 980X I have? Mainly I want the 64GB RAM and SATA 3.0, but the CPU needs to be somewhat faster and more USB 3.0 ports would be nice.
So am I. This 980X is getting old, especially the mainboard RAM and SATA limitations. I see that the octocore CPU is rated much lower than the hexacore, but is that really a limitation if the OC is not that much different? How much better is that Hasbro-E at the same speed (assuming it will reach 4.2) compared to the 980X I have? Mainly I want the 64GB RAM and SATA 3.0, but the CPU needs to be somewhat faster and more USB 3.0 ports would be nice.
Good one!
Hasbro is a toy company. :-D
Why aren't chips becoming noticeably cheaper?That's because they're focusing on mobile and power efficiency.
Tempted to go 5930 over 5960 for the higher clock speed. As Merc said, that is too many cores for a single user workstation. The number of programs that can use them all efficiently is vanishingly small. Even those that show load on all cores typically have some single-threaded process that bottlenecks the whole thing.
Workstation 1:
Intel Core i7-5930k (6-Core, 3.5GHz, Turbo to 3.7GHz)
32GB DDR4 (8GBx4)
NVidia Quadro 6000 (6GB RAM)
Samsung 840 Pro SSD 512GB
Corsair Obsidian 550D Quiet Mid-Tower
ASUS X99-A Motherboard
Noctua NH-D14 SE2011 Quiet CPU Cooler
Corsair Professional 860W Modular Digital Platinum PSU
LG CD/DVD/BD reader/writer
Windows 8.1 x64 Pro OEM
Office 2013 Home & Business
AutoCAD LT 2015
ESET NOD32 Antivirus
Workstation 2:
Intel Core i7-5820k (6-Core, 3.3GHz, Turbo to 3.6GHz)
32GB DDR4 (8GBx4)
NVidia Quadro K2000D (2GB RAM)
Samsung 840 Pro SSD 512GB
Corsair Obsidian 550D Quiet Mid-Tower
ASUS X99-A Motherboard
Noctua NH-D14 SE2011 Quiet CPU Cooler
Corsair Professional 860W Modular Digital Platinum PSU
LG CD/DVD/BD reader/writer
Windows 8.1 x64 Pro OEM
Office 2013 Home & Business
AutoCAD LT 2015
ESET NOD32 Antivirus
Network:
Synology DiskStation 5-Bay NAS (DS1513+)
5x WD40EFRX 4TB Drives (RAID-10 w/hot spare)
Cisco Compact 24-Port Gigabit Switch (SG102-24-NA)
$1200 doesn't look too bad, actually. Might just have to start saving my pennies.
Just curious why the Samsung 840 pro vs the 850 pro? Should be a great pair of workstations.
It all depends on your wants/needs but I feel like anyone who wants to move into an X99 should at least go for the increased PCIe lanes (40 vs 28)
Just curious why the Samsung 840 pro vs the 850 pro? Should be a great pair of workstations.
A high end desktop is definitely a huge luxury item. Save your pennies for a decent monitor first and if you want a desktop, maybe look at Sky Lake, the mainstream desktop platform coming next year. You'll probably wind up with 90% of the computer for 50% of the cost.
You might be better-served by an Intel 4790K on a stable Z97 motherboard rather than move to neutered 5820k hex-core LGA2011-v3 platform. Even though the 4770K sports two less cores, it'll do most of everything you'll want. Even if you choose to run lots of VMs, you'll run out of memory before your CPU becomes the bottleneck. Put the savings into a GTX980 or nicer monitor and play all the games you ever want at high resolutions. Add a second GPU later down the road and run reasonable 4K games.