- Nov 27, 2016
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More stupid "segmentation" at work, to attempt to extract maximum dollars from "enthusiasts".
Virtually all chip companies segment their product lines.
Really whats the point of a chip like this? To satisfy the enthusiast crowd?
Yes, this is the same guy that gave the half a**** review of locking two identical cores at the same clockspeed and being captain obvious that there is no IPC increase,
Hmm. Cliffs: He said "Avoid it", essentially.
Power consumption was high when overclocked, and performance was still lower than i5, for many tasks. (The exception being primarily single-threaded tasks.)
G3258 all over again, except, this time it's not cheap, and as he points out, since it's a "K" CPU, Intel no longer bundles a cooler with it. (The G3258 came with a decent copper-cored stock cooler.)
More stupid "segmentation" at work, to attempt to extract maximum dollars from "enthusiasts".
Thankfully, I took RussianSensation's advice, and bought an i5-6400 and OCed it, which should give much better performance.
Not all chip companies charge as much as a quad-core, for a glorified unlocked dual-core.
I'm having trouble understanding your post. What other chip companies are you referring too? AMD? Your post was very vague.Not all chip companies charge as much as a quad-core, for a glorified unlocked dual-core.
You actually bought the spastic Skylake? The lowest clocked and most retarded of the bunch? Should have at least gone to the 6500 not as castrated model . . .
I think he may have been referring to Cyrix.I'm having trouble understanding your post. What other chip companies are you referring too? AMD? Your post was very vague.
Many people will fall for the OC meme and then be forced to upgrade sooner than they want.
This thing is DOA even for enthusiasts/overclockers etc, better spend $30 more and get a real Quad Core and then OC if you want.
You can get a new Core i5 7400/7500 and OC to 4GHz+ on all cores with the default Heat-Sink for the same price of the Core i3 7350K + Heat-Sink. At 4GHz the Quad Core will be way better than the Core i3 7350 at 4.8GHz except in ST loads, but in the vast majority of latest games the Quad Core i5 at 4GHz will be way faster and with less stutter than the OCed 7350K.
$170 for a dual core in 2017 is really the worst Intel CPU of the last 6-7 years. Many people will fall for the OC meme and then be forced to upgrade sooner than they want.
This CPU would be a hit a couple of years ago.
Now, that games actually utilize and sometimes even need more cores its kind of meh.
Meanwhile, Intel is still not offering all that much value to their customers.
I meant, more along the lines of that particular SKU. $170 for an unlocked dual-core (with HT)? When you can buy an i5-6400 for $180, and BLCK OC? You do the math, I did.Then why do you keep buying their CPUs? Money talks, and it seems like you keep throwing cash at Intel.
I meant, more along the lines of that particular SKU. $170 for an unlocked dual-core (with HT)? When you can buy an i5-6400 for $180, and BLCK OC? You do the math, I did.
Haha nice. he was really vague though. I mean cmon manI think he may have been referring to Cyrix.
It all depends on perspective.
Pros
- For same or a little more than what a Core i3-6320 currently costs you're getting higher clocks and Intel sanctioned overclock - none of the BCLK overclock downsides
- It will be a much more capable chip than Pentium Anniversary Edition, HT supports can make a huge difference to Intel's dual-cores
Cons
- It will be competing against Intel's own used SB/IB/Haswell/Skylake 4C/4T CPUs + Core i5-7400/i5-7500 from the same CPU family (ST advantage vs MT advantage)
- You will need a Z170/Z270 motherboard if you want to overclock, and although they are relatively cheap today - H110/B150 MBs are still cheaper
Also the tests were already posted here.