philipma1957
Golden Member
- Jan 8, 2012
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there are no dual core i7?
there are dual core i7 in laptops
http://ark.intel.com/products/52231/Intel-Core-i7-2620M-Processor-(4M-Cache-up-to-3_40-GHz)
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there are no dual core i7?
I agree with you, when I said "may people" I was referring to the average user. I hear people refer to Intel's CPU lineup in this manner and it really irritates me. For enthusiasts that enjoy reading about hardware and put a lot of time and effort into reading benchmarks and planning our builds this is no problem but it becomes more of an issue for the casual PC buyer who is just listening to what the salespeople and the big box PC store are telling them.i mean it's always essential to look at cores, clock speeds, HT or not, Turbo Boost, etc.. regardless of which company CPU you are using.. i agree that Intel is semi-confusing but each model i3,i5,i7 does something different, it's all in the numbers.. you can't just look at i5 and automatically assume it's worse than a i7, there are so many factors to look at, as is the case with most computer parts.
Check this link. only the first one which I have i7 2630qm has 4 cores and 8 threads the rest of them are 2 core and 4 threads, all of them are name i7s.
Cheers.
http://ark.intel.com/compare/52219,54618,54610,54645,27469
AsusGuy, about salespeople and what they tell the customer, I have an experience with that. I only recently became knowledgeable in regards to computer hardware. I've always had a decent understanding of software but the hardware was just basic.
I can't tell you how dumb the salespeople at Best Buy, Staples, and other electronics stores truly are.
They were telling me that for gaming I should get an AMD A6 over an Intel i5-2500 because the AMD processors are MUCH better for gaming.. Now I understand that the AMD chips are APU's with a discrete graphics card built in, but in NO WAY does a A6 compare with the i5-2500, no way in hell.
Ah, so:
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Like I said, core count is irrelevant (but indicated specifically by Q). The only anomaly I see is the higher model number on the i7 2637M even though the 2630QM runs at a higher frequency and has 2 more cores. Reason is probably higher clocked igp on 2637M (1.2 vs 1.1 GHz) or the fact it has much lower TDP but still almost equal Turbo Boost (2.8 vs 2.9 GHz).
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the card that the A6 A8 and A10 come with are not good cards, trust me. I bought an A10 with a 7660D card and I could only run BF3 at Low settings ~25FPS. Even if I bought an i5-2500k with HD Graphics 2000, 3000(?) I bet I could run it at those settings.
Basically comparing an A6 to an i5 in terms of gaming is dumb. The CPU's are not even in the same league and the A6 MAY have a slight edge in graphics.. Either way, if you want to play a modern game on High settings, you WILL be getting another GPU.
So are you telling me the i7 2637m is better and faster than the i7 2630qm?
the card that the A6 A8 and A10 come with are not good cards, trust me. I bought an A10 with a 7660D card and I could only run BF3 at Low settings ~25FPS. Even if I bought an i5-2500k with HD Graphics 2000, 3000(?) I bet I could run it at those settings.
Basically comparing an A6 to an i5 in terms of gaming is dumb. The CPU's are not even in the same league and the A6 MAY have a slight edge in graphics.. Either way, if you want to play a modern game on High settings, you WILL be getting another GPU.
No, I'm saying it's weird that the 2637M has a higher model number than the 2630QM, since it has less cores and is clocked lower. The model number is supposed to reflect the performance of chips in the same family, it doesn't here unless you think igp or tdp is really important.
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That is what I am talking about, the i7 2637m and their cousins shouldn't be in the i7 class. they should be in the i5 or i3 class. since they only have 2 cores.
I remember the good old days that the 486DX and the 486SX. The 486SX can't be in the class of DX because it lack of the math procerssor no matter how much cach and no matter what clock speed.
Cheers.
I think the Intel desktop naming scheme makes sense. i3=dual core, i5=quad core, i7=quad core with hyperthreading, at least for SB and IvB. But the notebook nomenclature is extremely confusing IMO.
