I seriously doubt that Intel would shoot themselves in the foot with a .50cal hollow point exploding round filled with acid like that.
Whoa, dude. As a person like me, I understand it fine. No need to be so condescending.Dexter111 said:What people like you don't understandKinitawowi said:This is it, people. As much as I hate the things, tablets (and by extension smartphones) are where the next few years are heading, and if you're not in that market then you're not in the market. Microsoft figured that out (hence Windows 8) and Intel are catching on - show me a Samsung tablet where you can swap out the processor. No, on-board is the norm now, to be closely followed by off-chip - the raw clock speed of the die will stop being the thing when they realise that they can lower the heat overhead and thus raise the power output by pulling the GPU out.Boris Goodenough said:-- This is because Intel needs to be more competitive in the tablet market
Tower machines? Enthusiasts still swear by them, but you can't run a company aiming only for the enthusiasts. Sad but true. And towers are done, as far as the mainstream is concerned.
I work in PC retail and I call it as I see it. Any of the significant rendering, scientific work and a couple of other applications you mentioned are done on an entirely different server-based architecture rather than an old-school tower PC. The vast majority of what we sell is laptops - where CPUs are soldered in as a matter of course - followed by all-in-ones (which are frequently based on laptop architectures), then iPads and Nexus 7s and such. Tower desktops are low, low, low on the list. We get far more people coming and asking about the Nexus 10 than we do about the i7-3770K and liquid cooling setups.is that you can't do any sort of programming/work/typing/designing/encoding/rendering CG/any sort of research/scientific work and basically everything that big companies require on a "tablet", the entirety of other markets like PC Gaming, CAD, SAP, CGI etc. are also based on the PC architecture and it will not go away as much as some people and companies seem to desire it.
Tablets and similar devices are fine for reading something, browsing the web a bit and maybe reading E-Mails... I've got like 2-3 of them around the house in their various forms (most of them because I didn't have to pay), but anything that gets more serious than that requires and will continue to require a PC till there is something equivalent or better.
Just like "smart phones" you can keep in your pocket that do a lot of things tablet devices do didn't "kill the tablet market" or the other way around because they are a different form factor and do different things, they won't be going anywhere.
Nobody ever said Windows 8 was a good idea. But there was a point a couple of years ago when some variant of Windows was installed on some 85% of the computer systems on the planet. That number is falling fast, and it's not OSX that's eating it, it's Android - for much the same reason that ARM dominates the global processor market right now, not Intel. Windows 8 is a blatant marketing grab, a reactionary play to get into a market where they have practically zero presence. It's all wrong for anything other than a tablet or an all-in-one touchscreen. But those are where the wind is blowing right now. As Jarvis Cocker once sang, "It stinks, it sucks, it's anthropologically unjust. But the takings are up by a third; c***s are still running the world."And this article is sensationalist hogwash.
Oh and regarding Microsoft:
http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2012/08/microsoft-lost-mojo-steve-ballmer
http://semiaccurate.com/2012/11/14/microsoft-has-failed/
They do the same shit they've often done before from a "marketing" standpoint and some planned "market strategies" by their higher ups instead of what makes sense. Without really understanding the market, while throwing lots of money at it and hope that it sticks.
Am I the only one who thought "...the fuck?" when I read this?...architecture present in Intel's Core series of CPUs, none of which is particularly relevant to anyone but the most die-hard PC nerds.
That's true, but your average Joe doesn't know or care about the differences between a Core 2 Duo and all 3 flavours of a Core i7. Haven't you ever tried to explain something about computers to a non-technical person and watched their eyes glaze over? If your are lucky they will know what version of Windows their computer runs. If you are really lucky they will know if it has an Intel or AMD CPU and NVidia or AMD graphics.Aaron Sylvester said:Am I the only one who thought "...the fuck?" when I read this?...architecture present in Intel's Core series of CPUs, none of which is particularly relevant to anyone but the most die-hard PC nerds.
Pretty much every kid and their mother is running an Intel Core chip or has used one at some point. The Core2Duo, Core2Quad, Core i5, Core i7 (both in SB and IB flavors), etc etc...all those series fall under that naming scheme.
People are assuming either that Intel will leverage their market share to partake of either serious wallet rape or to limit the choices we have now by supplying fewer versions hence saving itself a ton on development/manufacture.Eri said:I'm confused. Why does this end custom built PC's? Sure, you might not be able to upgrade the cpu, but beside that, there is effectively no difference? Or am I missing something?
The problem here is that, the desires that drive the tablet market aren't necessarily the desires that drive the PC market. Because a lot of people who own PCs also own tablets. I know a lot of guys that wouldn't even DARE to not make their own machine, and still own tablets. Because their portable or casual gaming desires don't have the same demands as their 'hardcore' desires. It's a mistake to believe that because somebody might be willing to fire up Angry Birds while on the toilet they would be OK with that level of processing power for their main gaming rig, or be against gaming entirely.TheEndlessGrey said:AMD's 20% will grow among those who care about controlling every part of their system, if Intel puts the squeeze on as described above. What percentage of the total market those people comprise is another question. I have to suspect it's small enough that Intel is willing to let them go in order to get a larger return on the business and casual consumer markets. If the tablet invasion has shown us anything, it's that people will buy whatever hardware happens to be inside a device, as long as it has a slick feature list and good marketing.
I'm not sure how 'I'm not personally comfortable opening up my machine' really relates to PC enthusiasts though.Bhaalspawn said:Hey, another "Doom and Gloom" prediction for PC Gamers.
You'd think after Origin, 30FPS Lock, and Windows 8, PC Gamers would learn that every time they declare something to be a dangerous to PC Gaming, they always end up looking like melodramatic lunatics. So Intel is going to solder the CPU to the motherboard now, eh? Explain to be how this is an issue? I don't know about you guys, but my processor is already locked to my motherboard with screws, the heat sinks, and the fan that I'm afraid to remove it. And why would I want to?
And my laptop (the computer I use for gaming) has most of it's parts made by AMD/ATI anyway.
A soldered cpu should make your PC shopping more in-depth. Ask youserlf the following questions:
Is it at least 2.4 GHz?
Does it have at least 4 cores?
If yes to both, you're fine for the next few years.
Oh I totally agree that's the flaw in the idea, and I myself am one of those guys who has never once bought a pre-built computer but still has a tablet. The conflicting needs and usage patterns is why I hope Microsoft is smart enough to leave PC Windows alone while they pursue the tablet market with WinRT, but if they can start to merge the spaces to squeeze a few percentage points of market share, why would Intel not try to do the same? We're seeing the old giants starting to lose their grip, and fear drives irrational decisions.Damien Granz said:The problem here is that, the desires that drive the tablet market aren't necessarily the desires that drive the PC market. Because a lot of people who own PCs also own tablets. I know a lot of guys that wouldn't even DARE to not make their own machine, and still own tablets. Because their portable or casual gaming desires don't have the same demands as their 'hardcore' desires. It's a mistake to believe that because somebody might be willing to fire up Angry Birds while on the toilet they would be OK with that level of processing power for their main gaming rig, or be against gaming entirely.TheEndlessGrey said:snip
There is a large range between 'I'm not personally comfortable opening up my machine' and swapping out CPU chips. I have no problem replacing RAM, video cards, hardrives, DVD drives, power sources and even a motherboard but it never really occurred to me that I would need to replace a CPU chip. When I do a computer upgrade I am guaranteed to replace my motherboard while I might keep a lot of the other components if they are compatible.Damien Granz said:I'm not sure how 'I'm not personally comfortable opening up my machine' really relates to PC enthusiasts though.
I'm sure my grandmother isn't willing to open up 'My Computer' and look at the C drive at all and runs everything through the Start Menu or My Documents. Does that mean having a directory or control over where and how things are saved is a moot point too?