It could also be a cheaper technique to join the high-end Core i7 family, but that doesn’t mean it’s ” cheap.” Intel’s Core i7-970 ($899), which just started shipping to consumers around a month ago, has just undergone an intensive looking-over at Hot Hardware, where the six-core chip was tested alongside its more potent (and in turn, more costly) siblings. In the event you’ve little interest in dropping over a grand for a Core i7-980X, and you aren’t about to lower yourself by purchasing a quad-core Core i7-975, this here chip might do just you proud. In testing, critics found the 970 to be quick, but hardly mind-blowing, when handling more mundane tasks; stir in a couple of heavily threaded applications, though, and it managed to ” sail past” the quad-core contemporaries and ” keep pace” with the aforementioned 980X. All told, the silicon managed to perform around 5 percent worse than the 980X, yet it rings up for around 12 percent less. In the event you’ve got the workflow to actually reap the benefits of all six cores, and you may stomach not having the very best, it kind of feels as if the 970 strikes a great balance — and hey, in case you’re down with overclocking, which you could probably get that 5 percent back with just a gentle uptick on your energy bill.
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