Intel drops ‘i’ processor branding after 15 years, introduces ‘Ultra’ for higher-end chips
Intel drops ‘i’ processor branding after 15 years, introduces ‘Ultra’ for higher-end chips
Let's just have Microsofts Xbox division name then.
You forgot
which is different from
Don’t forget
Which is their best one.
Intel says the rebranding “better aligns to customer requests” to simplify its processor names
But it doesn't simplify the processor name!? Instead of i5, we now have to say "core 5" or "intel core 5".
"Which processor do you have?"
"5"
said nobody ever
I get it - I was just emphasising it :P
Was there a problem with the naming? I don't see why they'd change it given they've spent a long time building the brand.
Ha okay. I wasn't quite sure whether you're emphasizing or did misunderstood me.
Honestly I have no idea what the issue was with the old naming scheme. Didn't they just recently introduce an i9? Why not continue with an i11 etc instead of this Ultra nonsense.
They don't seem to understand where the customer confusion comes from. A lot of people out there don't really realize that a Core i7 could mean very different things because that name has been slapped on new CPUs for...15 years. They delineate product generations as part of a model number (2600k, 6700k, etc). There is so much ambiguity when someone just says their computer has a Core i7, non tech-savvy folk aren't going to remember the string of numbers that comes after that.
AMD copied them, and that probably leads to similar confusion.
Apple seems to be the smart one in the room when it comes to CPU naming. The generation of the product is right there in the first part of it's name: M1, M2, etc. The performance class is suffixed (no suffix, Pro, Max, Ultra).
My computer has an Intel i7 930 (pre 2010) and a 3xxx series Nvidia GPU, ask me anything.
I get about 20 FPS in Elden Ring. I can run Stable Diffusion fine though.
I mean, why not? If you're not necessarily a gamer or need computing power for dev stuff, why buy the latest and greatest?
In the end, buying new hardware every other release is also just consumerism. The performance of a modern day mid range CPU is absolutely overkill for everyday use
I've upgraded pretty much everything on this PC since I built it in 2010. Upgrading the CPU means getting a new motherboard and rebuilding everything. Basically it's the last thing that isn't easy to upgrade.
I don't play too many super graphically demanding games, it wasn't until Elden Ring that the CPU bottlenecked the graphics. For context, I played Shadow of War and the the new GPU gave me better graphics and fps. Cyberpunk ran like shit but I got it on sale and wasn't expecting anything really. Modded Minecraft and Cities Skylines had some problems as well but that's only the CPU's fault. For whatever reason Elden Ring is the first one for the CPU to bottleneck the GPU I guess.
I have stuff in a PC parts picker list but I'm just lazy lol. I'm playing through Tears of the Kingdom on my switch right now anyways and occasionally playing Loop Hero on my PC so upgrading isn't urgent.
It's mostly that I don't want to build a new PC or pay someone to do it.
The biggest problem I've been running into is MBR versus GPT hard drive stuff. A botched windows update made me need to restore from an image. The windows image wasn't working but had the underlying VHD files. I tried to restore them but they're in GPT format instead of MBR. It took a lot of effort but I was able to get a crazy workaround using a tool called Macrium Reflect.
Windows 11 won't run on my system because it doesn't have secure boot capabilities. To be honest that's bullshit on Windows' part. The metaphor I like to use is that it's like a car radio manufacturer saying their radio isn't compatible with your car because your car doesn't have a car alarm and then advertise that their radio is secure because it has a car alarm. (Not that I'm dying to upgrade to 11 but I heard 10 is approaching EOL.)
I ran a 4790k with a 3070, was quite fun. Cyberpunk was a bit of a mess, couldn't get north of about 40 even with low crowd density.
I moved to AM4 and have a 5800x, although I've replaced the 3070 with a 7900XT very recently.