I'm sure everyone's seen it, but by golly do we need to get some new threads up in here!
AMD, at a, beautifully, orchestrated showcase in Taipei just last night (for me), announced their new Ryzen 3000 CPUs. They also announced their 64-core Rome EPYC CPUs, and Navi, their "new" GPU series, which by the numbers doesn't look so amazing to me, and nobody really cares about.
What does look amazing is their new lineup of Ryzen CPUs, including two 8 core 16 thread CPUs, one at 65W SIXTY FIVE WHATS, and another at 105, with 3.6 -> 4.4 and 3.9 -> 4.4 clocks respectively.
Even though that was pretty incredible, not as much as the Ryzen 9 3900X, which albeit not a 16 core CPU like many were expecting, is a 12 core 24 thread monster running at 3.8 -> 4.6 Ghz, at again a 105W TDP.
Other insanities include a reported 40 PCIe 4.0 lanes, with (there's some muddyness about the implementation, but potentially), 80 PCIe 3.0 lanes worth of throughput. There's also a couple of Ryzen 5 CPUs that were supposedly announced, but elsewhere, not in the showcase. Prices for the Ryzen 7 3700X, Ryzen 7 3800X, and Ryzen 9 3900X are 329, 399, and 499 USD respectively.
12 cores 24 threads for half a grand, and apparently it seriously hurts Intel's upper end. We don't have independent benches yet, but it's looking like an all around bad day for Intel, who is still on a, we hope status, for 10nm's dropping in 2020, if it ever drops at all.
Not all is great for AMD, however, particularly its motherboard partners, as these new insane CPUs are apparently going to have iffy support statuses on motherboards from companies like MSI, although not ASUS, who state that all boards from Zen 1 launch to now are going to be perfectly compatible (presumably with BIOS updates) with all Ryzen 3000 chips.
So what are the thoughts? Has AMD repeated 2003 by releasing tech that completely destroys Intel in capabilities, with apparently little recourse? People have also had concerns about AMD's stability, and while I own many many perfectly stable, beautifully running AMD machines, I also own 4 (yes 4) completely dead nForce 4 939 motherboards I had /bought/ to use in a project. Time might only tell.