In the month of March, Intel has released a leaked product highlights its CPU to be released this year.
Now, Intel Haswell family presents one of the E and Core i7 Extreme Edition processor which is intended for consumers who need speed, as well as for the CPU workstations.
Reporting from Ars Technica (08/29/2014), the new i7 family consists of three new chips. Two of them are processors with six cores.
They are Core i7-5820K (389 dollar retail price) with clock 3.3 GHz Turbo Boost up to 3.6 GHz, and Core i7-5930K (583 dollar retail price) with 3.5 GHz clock and Turbo Boost up to 3 , 7 GHz.
Both have the feature HyperThreading, 15 MB L3 cache, and a TDP of 140W. The difference, apart from the memory clock speed, i7-5820K version only has a 28 lane PCI Express 3.0 40 lane instead.
However, that number was 16 more than the lane models quad-core CPU.
In addition, there are 8 core processor i7-5960X (retail price 999 dollars) which has a clock speed of 3.0 GHz, Turbo Boost up to 3.5 GHz, and 20 MB cache.
In addition to the CPU, Intel motherboard also brings to families Haswell-E which uses the LGA 2011 socket v3.
If consumers want to switch from Ivy Bridge to Haswell, the Ivy Bridge-E motherboard and Haswell-E will not be compatible with the new CPUs were released earlier.
In addition, the upgrader must also dispose of their DDR3 memory, because Haswell-E became the first Intel platform that integrates support DDR4 RAM.
Intel's new chipset also introduced to complement the latest hardware systems. Intel's X99 chipset has introduced support for a total of 14 USB ports (six of which are USB 3.0), one gigabit Ethernet ports, eight PCI Express 2.0 support, audio support, and a 10 port SATA III.
Haswell-E Intel introduced Thunderbolt also supports 2.0. Nmaun motherboard manufacturers have to integrate a dedicated controller that supports the high data transfer speed.
Now, Intel Haswell family presents one of the E and Core i7 Extreme Edition processor which is intended for consumers who need speed, as well as for the CPU workstations.
Reporting from Ars Technica (08/29/2014), the new i7 family consists of three new chips. Two of them are processors with six cores.
They are Core i7-5820K (389 dollar retail price) with clock 3.3 GHz Turbo Boost up to 3.6 GHz, and Core i7-5930K (583 dollar retail price) with 3.5 GHz clock and Turbo Boost up to 3 , 7 GHz.
Both have the feature HyperThreading, 15 MB L3 cache, and a TDP of 140W. The difference, apart from the memory clock speed, i7-5820K version only has a 28 lane PCI Express 3.0 40 lane instead.
However, that number was 16 more than the lane models quad-core CPU.
In addition, there are 8 core processor i7-5960X (retail price 999 dollars) which has a clock speed of 3.0 GHz, Turbo Boost up to 3.5 GHz, and 20 MB cache.
In addition to the CPU, Intel motherboard also brings to families Haswell-E which uses the LGA 2011 socket v3.
If consumers want to switch from Ivy Bridge to Haswell, the Ivy Bridge-E motherboard and Haswell-E will not be compatible with the new CPUs were released earlier.
In addition, the upgrader must also dispose of their DDR3 memory, because Haswell-E became the first Intel platform that integrates support DDR4 RAM.
Intel's new chipset also introduced to complement the latest hardware systems. Intel's X99 chipset has introduced support for a total of 14 USB ports (six of which are USB 3.0), one gigabit Ethernet ports, eight PCI Express 2.0 support, audio support, and a 10 port SATA III.
Haswell-E Intel introduced Thunderbolt also supports 2.0. Nmaun motherboard manufacturers have to integrate a dedicated controller that supports the high data transfer speed.
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