Launched over a decade ago,Painful Man And Woman the 65nm Core 2 Extreme QX6700 was Intel's first quad-core desktop processor. Though its ridiculous asking price of $1,000 ensured few would take the plunge, even with four unlocked cores operating at 2.67GHz, it was the fastest CPU money could buy back in 2006.
Fortunately, it was only a few months later when enthusiasts were blessed with the Core 2 Quad Q6600, another Kentsfield-based quad-core chip that sold for a less absurd $530.
Although the part was locked at a frequency of 2.4GHz, we were still able to overclock via the front side bus back then, allowing us to boost the Q6600 from its stock 2.4GHz operating frequency to well over 3GHz! By no surprise, it quickly became one of Intel's most popular enthusiast-grade processors of all time.
Released about 10 years ago, we thought it would be interesting to see how the Q6600 holds up in 2017 while playing today's games on modern GPUs. In other words, what would happen if you paired a trusty old PC with a GeForce GTX 1060 or GTX 1070.
We'll also throw in a Haswell dual-core Pentium, a Skylake Core i3, a Sandy Bridge Core i5 and the mighty Core i7-6700K. All CPUs will be benchmarked using the two Pascal graphics processors to establish some comparisons.
Quite a load is going to be placed on these aging processors as we test some of the most CPU-intensive games released in the last year to see if the Q6600 can cope with such a burden.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The Story Behind the Home of Forgotten Video Games
Ridiculous news cycle leads Jon Stewart and HBO to cancel their show
'Star Wars' was born with a nuclear explosion, and other weird news from May 25, 1977
Mark Zuckerberg awkwardly takes us inside his Harvard dorm room on Facebook Live
Trump tells '60 Minutes' that climate change will 'change back again'
Fox News retracts Seth Rich story
David Letterman calls Trump 'a man without a soul'
Shop Owala's Memorial Day Sale for 30% off tumblers
The internet has already got the plot for 'Top Gun 2' all figured out
TikTok ban looms in U.S. Here's the latest.
Underdog Stephen Colbert beats Jimmy Fallon in late night ratings
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。