![]() ![]() Those increases likely will not go away with Broadwell-E. Broadwell also arrived on the scene with some slight Instructions Per Clock (IPC) improvements over Haswell/Haswell-E based CPUs. Typically this brings with it lower clocks speeds, or high pricing. Naturally, the next HEDT processor is based off the same 14 nm lithography, Tri-gate (FinFET) technology as Broadwell-E.īroadwell-E, specifically the i7-6950X, brings us our first 10 core CPU which isn’t based on the Xeon or Opteron platforms. ![]() Since then, Intel brought to market their 14 nm Broadwell CPU architecture, on their mainstream platform, through their “tick-tock” cycle. That “extreme” CPU shook up the landscape then by providing the consumer with a high clocked, octo-core CPU with a total of 16 threads. The king of the consumer hill used to be the mighty i7-5960X our friend Dino reviewed back in August of 2014. Today we are going to get a chance to review Intel”s next processor in their High-End Desktop (HEDT) platform. ![]()
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