boltman2013
Banned
- May 12, 2014
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For those on the fence about the i7 versus i5 versus m3....in the SP4
I still say its not worth the $2000 investment in a tablet form factor for the premium to get to i7, however if you consider the SP4 i7 versus the SP3 i7 it blows it away ....i7 in the SP3 is constantly throttled, and the i7 in the SP4 can be pushed much closer to true maximum potential because of new cooling they say that nets an 80% improvement plus they double the eDRAM to 64MB and the processor is two generation newer.
If anything the i7 in the SP4 makes the i7SP3 a Jalopy as it never really was designed to take advantage of the i7 where this version is designed to do exactly that.
So for those who insist on Surface form factor and want the best version of it.... "yes, its worth it" in comparison to the previous model but that is for a very small subset of surface purchasers because of the stratospheric pricing to get there and the other options at that price level. The tech is solid and to be appreciated.
Personally if I were spending around 1.5K (and limited to a SP4) I would try to find a way to afford the i7 as it has huge performance increase over the i5 from the current and previous generation..I'm not that impressed with the skylake i5 in the SP4...I think the smart buys (and happiest end users) are the m3 and i7 ones at least they so far have less complaints.
Its common sense if you really think....
I tend to think the i5 in Microsoft's eyes , is pretty much the hugely profitable (@ $1399 for 8GB) mass market version as they were the ONLY demos in stores (encouraging purchases of that model) ... whereas the m3 and i7 are more custom and limited in production runs (separate custom designs) and appreciated by those that step out of the "norm" and not available to try out...like the tattoos not on the wall but in the tattoo's artist personal book for friends.
In the Mission Valley store they had six i5 demos and by the launch three were faulty. I think mass production runs does not at all help a very custom device like the surface. So I advise think twice before selecting a "mass produced" i5 of this years iteration. Last run it was the i3 you avoided. There is always one model combination that ends up lesser than the others and it may not be the cheapest one "especially when the new cheap model uses a completely new fanless cpu architecture" . Pretty sure they put MUCH more design effort in the m3 and i7 cpu in this model year..in fact Panos said the i7 required over 100 custom parts and was crazy hard to get just right..the way you want..that's customization and attention to detail. Same with the first fan-less surface pro and the M3 they needed to tech the hell out of it to get it to work..the i5 was pretty much the same as last year out of the there in terms of the redesign needed for that cpu.
So in summary the SP4 i5 was very Applesque ...moderate iteration/mass produced
The i7 and m3...brought the Thunder to the SP4. (Each a significant quantum improvement over counterpart SP3's)
I still say its not worth the $2000 investment in a tablet form factor for the premium to get to i7, however if you consider the SP4 i7 versus the SP3 i7 it blows it away ....i7 in the SP3 is constantly throttled, and the i7 in the SP4 can be pushed much closer to true maximum potential because of new cooling they say that nets an 80% improvement plus they double the eDRAM to 64MB and the processor is two generation newer.
If anything the i7 in the SP4 makes the i7SP3 a Jalopy as it never really was designed to take advantage of the i7 where this version is designed to do exactly that.
So for those who insist on Surface form factor and want the best version of it.... "yes, its worth it" in comparison to the previous model but that is for a very small subset of surface purchasers because of the stratospheric pricing to get there and the other options at that price level. The tech is solid and to be appreciated.
Personally if I were spending around 1.5K (and limited to a SP4) I would try to find a way to afford the i7 as it has huge performance increase over the i5 from the current and previous generation..I'm not that impressed with the skylake i5 in the SP4...I think the smart buys (and happiest end users) are the m3 and i7 ones at least they so far have less complaints.
Its common sense if you really think....
I tend to think the i5 in Microsoft's eyes , is pretty much the hugely profitable (@ $1399 for 8GB) mass market version as they were the ONLY demos in stores (encouraging purchases of that model) ... whereas the m3 and i7 are more custom and limited in production runs (separate custom designs) and appreciated by those that step out of the "norm" and not available to try out...like the tattoos not on the wall but in the tattoo's artist personal book for friends.
In the Mission Valley store they had six i5 demos and by the launch three were faulty. I think mass production runs does not at all help a very custom device like the surface. So I advise think twice before selecting a "mass produced" i5 of this years iteration. Last run it was the i3 you avoided. There is always one model combination that ends up lesser than the others and it may not be the cheapest one "especially when the new cheap model uses a completely new fanless cpu architecture" . Pretty sure they put MUCH more design effort in the m3 and i7 cpu in this model year..in fact Panos said the i7 required over 100 custom parts and was crazy hard to get just right..the way you want..that's customization and attention to detail. Same with the first fan-less surface pro and the M3 they needed to tech the hell out of it to get it to work..the i5 was pretty much the same as last year out of the there in terms of the redesign needed for that cpu.
So in summary the SP4 i5 was very Applesque ...moderate iteration/mass produced
The i7 and m3...brought the Thunder to the SP4. (Each a significant quantum improvement over counterpart SP3's)
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