New rumors about the AMD Ryzen 7 1950X processor state that it will have a base frequency of 3.1GHz and a Boost mode of 3.6GHz with a TDP of 180W.
A few days ago there was talk of a new processor based on AMD Ryzen, specifically this would have the name of AMD Ryzen 7 1950X, according to rumors. The first data spoke of a TDP of 150W, but the latest data speaks of a TDP of 180W with a base working frequency of 3.1GHz and a Boost mode of 3.6GHz, this would make it equivalent in performance to two AMD Ryzen 7 1700 processors , working together simultaneously.
Logically this is only hearsay at this point, since we can not guarantee anything in this field. It is also being discussed that more processors will arrive along with this, in a version of HEDT processors similar to those currently offered by Intel with the Broadwell-E and the Skylake-X and Kaby Lake-X that will arrive this summer as confirmed by Intel. These new processors will not use the AM4 socket and neither will the X370 and B350 chipsets, which are the most powerful of AMD, but will use a new socket called X399, which will support four channels of RAM and an uncommon overclocking capacity. .
They will not be commercial processors for gaming, they will be designed for other types of users, such as people who dedicate themselves to photo and video editing, perform streaming, advanced programming and from time to time want to play a game to relax. As with Intel, these processors are somewhere between gaming processors and professional processors, such as Intel Xeon, being in this case a bridge processor between Ryzen and Naples for servers.
We recall that this Ryzen 7 1950X will have sixteen cores and thirty-two processing threads, being the most powerful and with more cores on the market within what we will call 'commercial processors', leaving aside processors for servers and Workstation.
Source: overclock3D
Good article !
So when they said that the 1800x was the high-end it was that. the high range and this the premium range.
The professional range is that, for almost pure work uses, that you can do everything is another thing.
and yes, those of intel or igpu have
HEDT processors do not have an iGPU, since it consumes and generates heat and is useless, because for these processors an iGPU is silly, moreover, less than a GTX 1080 does not make sense for one of these processors, although the best serious combination with an NVIDIA Quadro GPU.
And yes, that's why
You have to distinguish between high-end and premium or extreme range. This AMD processor is still four CCX modules or two processors together. Each CCX module is composed of four internally interconnected cores. They are not processors for 'normal' users. If the 1800X is already absurd to buy it for gaming, as there are people who have done it, this processor is not even telling you. It is designed for home servers, workstations, photo editing, programming ...
But it seems like it's for gaming, I just read about another 1900-core Ryzen 12, like these are for gaming too, although I understand that it's unnecessary.