Sunday, April 29th 2012
Intel Core "Ivy Bridge" Processors Start Selling
After last Monday's launch, Intel's new Core "Ivy Bridge" processors started selling in the retail channel, today. At least six quad-core models under Core i5 and Core i7 brand extensions were listed on US retailer Newegg.com, which included the Core i7-3770K (3.50 GHz, Unlocked) at US $349.99, Core i7-3770S (3.10 GHz) at $319.99, Core i7-3770 (3.40 GHz, locked) also at $319.99, Core i5-3570K (3.40 GHz, Unlocked) at $249.99, Core i5-3550 (3.40 GHz) at $219.99, Core i5-3450 (3.10 GHz) at $199.99, and Core i5-3450S (2.80 GHz) also at $199.99.
33 Comments on Intel Core "Ivy Bridge" Processors Start Selling
None of the other models have received an official price cut, so it's possible that Intel will just discontinue Sandy Bridge without dropping the price.
the 32nm used in Sandy was a mature process.
They also had a deal on the Core i7 2600k a few weeks back when they were selling it for ~$199.99. I was out of town or I would have bought one at that price.
Newegg in contrast will often jack up the price of new hardware where Microcenter typically under sells.
Core i5-3550 vs Xeon E3-1230 v2 (same socket, same base/turbo frequency, same price)
Xeon have more cache (8mb > 6mb), less TDP (69w < 77w), HyperThread (8threads > 4 threads), no crappy gpu (thx for lower tdp)
you can also save $70 on i7 and got gpu-less version with lower tdp:
Core i7-3770 vs Xeon E3-1240 v2
paying $70 for intel gpu is insane, you can get better external card for this price.
IB appears to be little in the way of performance increase let alone if there will be any benefits of PCI-E 3.0 while they are still considered great good performing chips.
:toast:
In All Honesty Id rather Have Higher IPC than higher clocks.
and I wouldnt count keeping the current 1155 parts with 1150 on its way