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#1 | |
Moonshine
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Southampton
Posts: 3,201
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http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/Intel-...iew-31404.html
Quote:
However, performance for gaming looks to be somewhat of a moot point currently still; Crysis (1680 x 1050): Core i7 965 - 167.7 FPS QX9770 - 143 FPS E8600 - 139.1 FPS Core i7 920 - 140.9 FPS UT3: Core i7 965 - 154.5 FPS QX9770 - 150.4 FPS E8600 - 137.7 FPS Core i7 920 - 136.9 FPS WiC (1680 x 1050): Core i7 965 - 218 FPS QX9770 - 157 FPS E8600 - 153 FPS Core i7 920 - 172 FPS Supreme Commander: Core i7 965 - 35.20 FPS QX9770 - 33.85 FPS E8600 - 29.35 FPS Core i7 920 - 32.55 FPS ...only really a significant boost in one game but one that's hardly unplayable on current tech.
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#2 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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It doesn't hugely surprise me, the chip really is aimed more at the server market than the home market. The benefits of the i7 over the current ranges are minimal at best for gamers and your average home users. Server admins and the like should see some good boosts. The i7 is the 'Tock' end of the tick-tock development cycle IIRC, re-arcitecturing the chip on the smaller die that the last Tick cycle brought in. The next chip should be the refinement and die shrink based on the i7 architecture, so might be a bit more of a performance increase.
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#3 |
Vodka Martini
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Kingston
Posts: 862
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A logical step for intel, while it's lovely picking up a £60 processor and clocking the hell out of it, it's doing them no favors. On the gaming front, i personally think CPUs have outstripped the CPU requirements for games long ago, the only limitation these days (and imo, for a while to come) is GPU.
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#4 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
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8 virtual cores isn't going to help the gamer when the vast majority of games are only just about getting to grips with two cores, so those scores aren't surprising. Writing software that can use multiple cores well isn't easy, but now that at least two cores has become mainstream it's more likely to happen in new games.
Intel are obviously trying to push the Extreme chips, and why not? The market segment is very much a niche play - the chips don't fit well with either the mainstream domestic or server markets (the former don't care about overclocking, the latter want the Xeon derivatives and don't care about overclocking either), so that just leaves the enthusiast and niche OEM market, and they're the ones who know how to overclock the **** off the cheap chips - just what Intel doesn't want. Manufacturer attempts at limiting overclocking options are certainly nothing new either. |
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#5 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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/me remembers with fondness the use of graphite pencils on the old Athlon chips.
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