Reply 40 of 64, by lti
jmarsh wrote on 2024-08-31, 16:29:VivienM wrote on 2024-08-31, 16:17:lti wrote on 2024-08-31, 15:49:I haven't been interested in modern hardware since Sandy Bridge was such a huge disappointment (but apparently only for me).
(Also, I tend to agree that Sandy Bridge was somewhat of a disappointment at the time. It's only when everything that came after Sandy/Ivy Bridge turned out to be even more of a disappointment that Sandy/Ivy Bridge retroactively became this legendary platform. It's funny, in 2010 I reorganized some hardware around, made a Q8300 primarily out of existing parts my main desktop box thinking that that would be temporary due to how weird the Nehalem lineup was and it'd be replaced by the next thing after the Nehalem mess, and that Q8300 ended up lasting me until 2017 when I got an i7-7700)
Not sure what you guys are remembering, the 2600K was highly lauded when it arrived and practically everyone wanted one.
The entire Sandy Bridge series was highly recommended in 2011 (even with the chipset bug), and there are still a lot of them around today. The problem was that I had a mobile i3 (I was just starting college and didn't have a wealthy family), and the stuff I did in school must have been the one thing Sandy Bridge was bad at. I went from an Athlon XP-M 1400+ to that, and the performance difference was still disappointing. I've briefly mentioned in other threads that even desktop Sandy Bridge was strangely slow in MATLAB.
The graphics drivers were totally broken as well, meaning that the much-hyped Quick Sync encoder was totally non-functional. Since I had a cheap computer with only integrated graphics, I also found that hardware-accelerated H.264 decoding caused random BSODs, most software I tried couldn't even detect basic 3D acceleration, and Intel didn't release any updates for four years (and then they suddenly dumped a bunch of "older" drivers on their website at the same time as finally releasing that update in 2015 - two weeks prior, the latest driver on their website was the one the laptop shipped with).