maroon1
New Member
Review
http://anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3704&p=1
Those processors have an Integrated GPU which performs day and night better than the older Intel GMA 4500HD IGP, and it can compete very well even with AMD 790GX. Thats really good news for HTPC users.
The i5 661 cost the same as Core i5 750. So, unless you want to use the integrated GPU, I would not really recommend i5 6xx series. But i3 5xx are much more attractive for its price
http://anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3704&p=1
The performance of these processors are quite impressive. The Core i3 530 was able to compete very well against Athlon X4 630 in multi-threading application, and at same time it performs much better in single-threaded applications.With the i3s you get a great dual-core chip that is competitive with AMD's Athlon II X4 line in many multi-threaded applications. AMD sacrificed its L3 cache in order to bring four cores down to reasonable price points. Intel's Core i3s start with two cores, a complete cache hierarchy, and give you Hyper Threading to improve performance in those multi-threaded scenarios. If you're doing a lot of video encoding or 3D rendering AMD's cheap quad-cores are going to be a better option, but for nearly everything else (gaming included) you'll be better off with the Core i3.
These things also overclock ridiculously well. We got 3.8GHz out of the i5 661 at stock voltage and I'd expect similarly sweet results out of the i3s.
For a HTPC there's simply none better than these new Clarkies. The on-package GPU keeps power consumption nice and low, enabling some pretty cool mini-ITX designs that we'll see this year. Then there's the feature holy-grail: Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD-MA bitstreaming over HDMI. If you're serious about building an HTPC in 2010, you'll want one of Intel's new Core i3s or i5s.
A huge selling point for corporate markets is going to be Clarkdale's AES-NI support. The impact on disk performance with Bitlocker enabled is noticeable. Enabling Bitlocker caused my testbed SSD to take a 15% performance hit in disk I/O on Clarkdale vs. over 30% with Lynnfield. If you need to enable disk encryption as a corporate requirement, Clarkdale (and Arrandale) is going to help improve performance tremendously. Couple it with an SSD and you're in business.
Those processors have an Integrated GPU which performs day and night better than the older Intel GMA 4500HD IGP, and it can compete very well even with AMD 790GX. Thats really good news for HTPC users.
The i5 661 cost the same as Core i5 750. So, unless you want to use the integrated GPU, I would not really recommend i5 6xx series. But i3 5xx are much more attractive for its price
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