Quote from: unfair comparison indeed on Yesterday at 09:56:42Quotedesktop ai/llm sure the 8060S is the pick
Yes, Strix Halo wins, but it's also an unfair comparison:
Panther Lake (up to 96 or 128 GB RAM?): 153.6 GB/s = 128-bit * 9600 MT/s / 1000 / 8.
Strix Halo (up to 128 GB RAM): 256 GB/s = 256-bit * 8000 MT/s / 1000 / 8.
It looks like Panther Lake goes up to 96 GB, not 128 GB, RAM:
Quote from: intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/245526/intel-core-ultra-x9-processor-388h-18m-cache-up-to-5-10-ghz/specifications.htmlMax Memory Size (dependent on memory type) 96 GB
Memory Types Up to LPDDR5X 9600 MT/s
Max # of Memory Channels 2
Quote from: unfair comparison indeed on Yesterday at 09:56:42(both top comments) Someone asked the real question:
QuoteWhy can't they have a low core count CPU but still keep the full iGPU?
Answer by another:
QuoteUpselling
So,
Quote from: intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/245526/intel-core-ultra-x9-processor-388h-18m-cache-up-to-5-10-ghz/specifications.htmlTotal Cores 16
# of Performance-cores 4
# of Efficient-cores 8
# of Low Power Efficient-cores 4
Total Threads 16
is having all these cores really necessary for gaming? Maybe this is where INTEL could save on costs, and also, INTEL, stop upselling this iGPU, because if the APU is too expensive, people will simply get the 4050 Laptop instead.
PS: Suggestion: Unless you really need a gaming laptop (because you game when you travel, as one would have nothing better to do than gaming, when traveling, right?), one can build a desktop gaming PC for like half the price (or less), that is also still quite a bit faster (or much faster for the same price), which automatically makes it much more repairable and you can attach and, due to it being faster, actually utilize a 360 Hz (or more) QD-OLED monitor, too.