Wbmw:
Are you that poor at reading comprehension. What is the typical value of an eight member set of 1,2,1,2,1,2,1,2? Hint, it isn't 1 or 2. Its 1.5. Does 1.5 appear as any member of that set? No. This assumption that a typical value of a set must be a value in that set is wrong. And you continue to make that error.
Intel used the word "typical" die size. They didn't say exact size or is the size, just that it was typical. On the other document, Intel specified two variants, each precisely a known die size. So when they list (enumerate) the variants, the dies sizes are exact. When they don't, its a range of die sizes, which they either don't want to enumerate or intentionally leave vague by specifying a typical die size. Would it be easier for you had they said average?
From basic statistics book:
"An average is a number which represents a typical value of a set"
Pete |