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System Name | Rectangulote 2 |
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Processor | Ryzen 7 9800X3D |
Motherboard | Asus TUF Gaming B650-PLUS |
Cooling | Alphacool Eisbaer Pro Aurora 360 + 240 ST30 |
Memory | 64 GB DDR5 6000mhz Corsair Vengeance |
Video Card(s) | Asus TUF Gaming RTX 4090 OC |
Storage | 3 x WD Black SN-850X 1TB |
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Case | Corsair 5000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Evga Nu Audio + Beyerdynamic DT 150 + Trust GTX 258 |
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Mouse | Razer Naga Wireless Pro |
Keyboard | Keychron K4 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Things advance when consumers and makers find there is need and knowhow to advance, sometimes is need, sometime is knowhow, sometimes consumers push and sometimes makers. Your examples are off because the daily software hasn't catched up to what an 8 core can offer, and there is always the top of the line 16 core and threadripper line if you really need that many cores, we are talking more down to earth cpus here. Why would we need more cores to watch videos or social media? And not every single piece of software can or should scale on multithread.2006: You really need more than two cores on your daily home and gaming machine?
1981: You really need more than 640K of memory on your daily home and gaming machine?
What I'm saying is we need to keep an eye on what AMD is or isn't doing. Sure, eight cores may be overkill nowadays, but what about in a few years?
2006 was already ripe for multithreaded software and still took like 2 or 3 years to take advantage. So the 640k memory limit. Is not even close to the situation we are now, we are far from exploiting actively 8 cores for daily tasks or even gaming.
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