Intel Strategy Shuts Out PC Enthusiasts

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Intel Strategy Shuts Out PC Enthusiasts


Changes to Intel's microprocessor architecture are leading to dire predictions of doom and gloom for hardcore PC gamers.

Broadwell is the 14nm "shrink" of the Haswell microarchitecture, which is the successor to Ivy Bridge architecture present in Intel's Core series of CPUs, none of which is particularly relevant to anyone but the most die-hard PC nerds. But this may be: According to reports, Broadwell will not be released in an LGA package - that is, a chip that can be inserted into and removed from sockets - but instead will come soldered directly to motherboards. Even for just casual PC fans, that's bad news.

The move signals a possible power-grab by Intel, as it will put the squeeze on motherboard makers and OEM chip buyers. As Semiaccurate suggests, Intel could be pursuing a long-term strategy of cutting out third-party manufacturers and moving toward a scenario where it handles virtually everything itself: CPU, motherboard and integrated audio and video. For the hardcore PC types, no socketable CPU means an effective end to custom-built PCs for any purpose, gaming or otherwise.

The one glimmer of good news is the likelihood that Skylake, Broadwell's planned successor, will be socket-based. But that will last for just one or two generations and according to the report, "increasing integration will make this minor backpedaling step a rather moot point, there won't be anything left to tweak and any headroom will have been screened out at the fab prior to fuses being blown."

Is the end of the PC as we know it really in the offing? AMD could step into the breach but with less than 20 percent of the CPU market under its control as of the end of 2011, it doesn't have the muscle to prop up a robust support industry. "Dead" isn't necessarily dead, but the future of the PC isn't looking too bright.

Source: Semiaccurate [http://semiaccurate.com/2012/11/26/intel-kills-off-the-desktop-pcs-go-with-it/]



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Kargathia

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Jul 16, 2009
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But, but.... think of all the internet flamefests we can't have if PC's are the exact same thing as consoles!
 

Karadalis

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Apr 26, 2011
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Oh? Wanting to pull a microsoft here, arent we intel? Wonder if the EU will sue them like they did with microsoft... i think soldering your CPU down to motherboards is more dire then delivering your internet explorer with windows...
 

drkchmst

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Mar 28, 2010
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Meh I can't afford Intel anymore. I started looking into new mobo and CPU combos and quite frankly id rather pay $400 for a top of the line and chip and mobo than $400 for a mediocre Intel chip and mobo. I like Intel chips but quite frankly I won't settle.
 

Moonlight Butterfly

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Mar 16, 2011
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GAunderrated said:
I'm not too worried as someone will step in if the demand is strong enough.
That's pretty much what I thought. If it does happen let's hope they don't have a monopoly for long.
 

gunny1993

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Jun 26, 2012
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Hang on if Haswell is successor to ivy bridge, what role does Broadwell fill? Haswell is as far as i'm aware for laptops/desktops and ultrabooks does that not mean broadwell will be a new range of "intel atom" like processors?

Or is Broadwell the successor to haswell, in which case i shall begin sharpening my pitchfork[s/] wallet and buying amd..... fuck intel mobos
 

Meight08

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Feb 16, 2011
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Hey AMD This is your chance and you had better fucking take it.

EDIT: Wait isn't amd in financial troubles?
 

Kenjitsuka

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Sep 10, 2009
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If Intel really does this regulators will be mad, and AMD can always become big again filling the gap.
Even though their designs are far inferior in the high end at the moment.
 

GamingAwesome1

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May 22, 2009
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The solution from the consumer end of things is just simply not to support it.

And so I shall. AMD get your shit together and fill the void.
 

elilupe

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Jun 1, 2009
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Well fahk. Some other company better come along to save the socketed computer if Intel really does start this.
 

Soviet Heavy

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Jan 22, 2010
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I still enjoy AMD processors. They don't melt on me for one thing. Plus their Radeon cards run quiet.
 

RA92

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Jan 1, 2011
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Looks like I won't be switching over from AMD any time soon.

Fuck you Intel!
 

R3dF41c0n

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Feb 11, 2009
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Wow, this makes me glad I've always build AMD systems. Could this mean AMD would become the dominate chip in the PC gaming arena? Time will tell.
 

gunny1993

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Jun 26, 2012
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Roelof Wesselius said:
Hey AMD This is your chance and you had better fucking take it.

EDIT: Wait isn't amd in financial troubles?
Their stocks were recently at the lowest they've been for almost 2 decades, they have a tiny portion of the CPU market. Although intel haven't been doing too well (current climate and all that shit) AMD are still doing worse. Whether they are on the precipice of disaster though, remains to be seen.
 

Griffolion

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Aug 18, 2009
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Okay then, looks like we're sticking with Ivy Bridge for another generation. That's cool.
 

mechalynx

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Mar 23, 2008
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Well well well, looks like high time for me to abandon the Intel ship. Does this mean I'll have to give up NVIDIA?
 

Laughing Man

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Oct 10, 2008
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Sorry you folk are shocked by this? This was coming, okay maybe not as fast as I thought but it started when the new chips shifted tasks that previously where the job of the mobo (i.e on board graphics, memory control, etc.) This won't be the end of the enthusiast market it just means a new direction. Intel will create the reference, the current mobo creators will pick that up and either make their own tweaked versions or make their own board with the chip on it, and if that sounds like something else it is exactly what the GPU market has been doing for the last decade or so and their is hardly a lack of options when it comes to GPUs in a whole range of performance brackets.