A very long period has passed when I upgraded my dated computer to a Core2Duo E6600 processor, which belonged to the very first generation of Core. But, with the launch of this series, he managed to game the system. And in this area, I actually saw a significant improvement in speed (in my day-to-day work, I can already load more than two cores and two gigabytes of memory), as well as a reduction in the amount of platform resources that I needed. A maximum of 3.7 GHz clock speed is achieved when all four cores are loaded, which is a bit of a letdown in terms of overclocking potential. But, the speed at ordinary frequencies is now more than sufficient, and even four cores, with a tendency for the software to parallelize the load, should be sufficient for the next three years. In a nutshell, this is an outstanding processor for a high-performance machine that is also reasonably priced.
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