Haswell Desktop Transition Promised To Be Significantly Slower Compared to Ivy Bridge
Haswell Desktop Transition Promised To Be Significantly Slower Compared to Ivy Bridge
The transition to a new socket and new chipset are likely to be a reason for the slowdown.
The production of Ivy Bridge 22nm desktop parts started in the first half of 2012, at a time when Sandy Bridge generation products acquitted for almost 80 percent of Intel's total desktop CPU shipments. At that time, Ivy Bridge accounted for less than 5 percent of Intel desktop CPUs, but the transition plans envisioned it quickly growing to more than 30 percent in the second half of 2012.
In the first half of 2013 Intel plans that close to 80 percent of desktop CPUs on the market will be based on Ivy Bridge and Haswell will take less than five percent. To make matters worse. Haswell will take close to 20 percent of desktop market in the second half of 2013, some 30 percent less than with the introduction of Ivy Bridge.
Source: Fudzilla
Write a comment below. No registration needed!
|
|