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Originally posted by ranger2992
I am stupid enough. Actually I don't consider myself stupid at all. I work hard and spend my money how I choose according to my budget. My buying this chip is no different than somebody who spends $300 on a bottle of champane. Furthermore, I still remember the days when a Pentium chip was like $2000. Rather than call somebody stupid for their choice of hardware, why don't you focus on your own machine.
You're right, it is all about choices, but wow - its been like 5 years since we've seen a consumer chip for $1000.
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How much do you guys think the release of the EE will drop the prices of other intel chips by, if any?
Since the EE is so far above the other chips, it probably won't impact the pricing of the other chips at all.
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From what I best understand, a paper launch is where a company release the specifications and benchmark comparisons (where applicable) of the completed product (and even send some to review sites) , yet the product won't be avaliable to buy for a good while (say a couple of months).
There is a little more to it than that. Typically, when you "launch" "introduce" or "release" a product, that means it is on sale, in stores NOW. A paper launch comes in two levels - either a launch with extremely limited quantities or a launch that isn't really a launch at all (no products on sale at all) - more of an "introduction" or "announcement." An "introduction" is something often done at Comdex and happens many months (even a year) before a launch. Sometimes its tough to tell which you are dealing with though. The P3 1ghz for example was paper launched a week or two after the Athlon 1gh due to the 1ghz race, was actually available for sale a few weeks later, but took several months before Intel was even shipping it in reasonable quantities or to anyone besides Dell. Check press releases for these words. Example: P4 EE
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SANTA CLARA, Calif., Nov 3, 2003 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Intel Corporation today introduced the Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 processor Extreme Edition supporting Hyper-Threading (HT) Technology** at 3.20 GHz. High-performance computers based on this new processor are designed for high-end gamers and computing enthusiasts and are now available from system manufacturers worldwide.
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The P4EE is a sweet chip And no its not a paper launch as some AMD fanatics would like to think.. Since I was able to order a complete setup with a 3.2EE about 2 months ago now
Now, I wouldn't call it a paper launch either, but for a different reason. I remember the links you posted a month or so ago, but I never heard of anyone acutally buying one. I certainly can't prove it (neither can you of course) but I suspect if you ordered one a month ago, it wouldn't have shipped until today. According to Intel, the launch is today and it is on sale today. Call it a disguised pre-order by an unscrupulous oem. So it wasn't paper launched 2 months ago because it wasn't launched until today.