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Reddit mentions of Intel Core i7-7800X X-Series Processor 6 Cores up to 4.0 GHz Turbo Unlocked LGA2066 X299 Series 140W

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Intel Core i7-7800X X-Series Processor 6 Cores up to 4.0 GHz Turbo Unlocked LGA2066 X299 Series 140W. Here are the top ones.

Intel Core i7-7800X X-Series Processor 6 Cores up to 4.0 GHz Turbo Unlocked LGA2066 X299 Series 140W
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    Features:
  • 6 Cores / 12 Threads
  • 3.50 GHz up to 4.00 GHz / 8.25 MB Cache
  • Quad DDR4 2666 Memory Channels
  • Compatible only with Motherboards based on Intel X299 Series Chipsets
  • Intel Optane Memory Supported
Specs:
Height4.2519684996 Inches
Length1.6535433054 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJune 2017
SizeProcessor
Weight0.2 Pounds
Width5.8267716476 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Intel Core i7-7800X X-Series Processor 6 Cores up to 4.0 GHz Turbo Unlocked LGA2066 X299 Series 140W:

u/ExWei · -3 pointsr/europe

Read the whole OP article:

  • Microsoft’s failure to obey a 2004 antitrust order and charge reasonable fees for software licenses saw it fined €899 million four years later.

  • Intel’s lawyer said in 2009 that he was “mystified” on what regulators wanted the company to do to comply with an order to halt anti-competitive rebates for chip sales to computer makers. Intel may finally receive clarity when the EU’s top court rules on its legal challenge to a 1.06 billion euro fine on Sept. 6.

  • Regulators are also expected to levy fines in separate investigations into Google’s Android mobile-phone software -- possibly later this year -- and the AdSense advertising service.

    So these great companies that do something new and innovative gets fined. All thanks to some law created by the bureaucrats.

    Were customers hurt by the Intel's rebates? I doubt it. Who was really hurt by them? Some company that was unable to charge customers a higher price, and thanks to EU's "antitrust laws", they are now able to do that.

    The press release that you sent:

    > It denied other companies the chance to compete on the merits and to innovate. And most importantly, it denied European consumers a genuine choice of services and the full benefits of innovation."

    How does it deny? How European customers do not have a choice? I know that there are amazon.de, alternate.de, cyberport.de, mindfactory.de and other big European stores and guess where did I find them? In Google. Somehow "evil" Google shopping did not prevent me.

    Using this "antitrust law", could we apply the same logic to EU? On the EU membership application, does it advertise other unions, such as CIS, NAFTA, etc? Does Eurozone application advertise Chinese yuan? It does not, because it would be absurd. Just like the Google's case is absurd.

    Let's compare American Amazon and German Amazon and see how it works, lets take for example a very new and innovative Intel Core i7-7800X processor.

    On American Amazon it costs $375.90 = 315.55 euro.

    On German Amazon it costs 355.99 euro.

    By some reason, in EU it costs 12% more expensive. So much for a customer benefit?