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E8600 the fastest Core 2 Duo | Thông tin về chủ đề cpu e8600 |

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E8600 the fastest Core 2 Duo

E8600 the fastest Core 2 Duo

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E8600 the fastest Core 2 Duo.

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39 thoughts on “E8600 the fastest Core 2 Duo | Thông tin về chủ đề cpu e8600 |”

  1. About storage on an XP machines, lately I've bought 2 Velociraptor HDDs for a laugh. They're not expensive but it depends very much on the second hand seller.
    I recently built a cute little rig that's only capable of running older games out of spare parts and picked up a 250gb Velociraptor as a game drive, it felt right.
    Back in the day I dreamed of having two raptor drives and slapping them together in raid 0. The cheaper than chips micro atx case I used ddn't have room for more than one 3.5" hdd but if it did I totally would have.
    The other Velociraptor is 1TB and it's actually in my main rig to use as game drive for games I don't need or want to have on my NVME.

  2. 2008 I was using a single-core AMD S939 Athlon 64 3200+ (2.0GHz), which I then overlocked to 2.5 GHz on a dirt-cheap board. I then slapped in a dual-core 4200+ (2.2 GHz), again over-clocking it to get more free performance; in this case, a nice 2.7 GHz. The board lasted many years of abuse before it finally started to fail (voltage regulator).

    But throughout this period, there was no denying the raw IPC advantage of Intel's Core 2 Duo, even more so with over-clocking. Still, S939 seemed to put up a good fight, and was still fast enough for plenty titles. For instance I could still run the likes of Crysis, Far Cry, COD 4 and Mafia II quite well even on a lowly Geforce 9600 GS. Return to Castle Wolfenstein with all the post-processing one can muster still ran like a bat out of hell.

    Which brings me to my main point. There's still a ton of fantastic games available from this era, whether you have AMD or Intel. I spend a disgusting amount of time on Far Cry, for instance, and I do not regret a moment. Coming from someone who tried to run these on MUCH older hardware (e.g. AMD K6-III+/nVidia Geforce 4200+), seeing them run silk-smooth with all the bells and whistles was like a dream come true even if it was some years after their release.

    There were excemptions, however, such as GTA San Andreas – not so much the game but the multi-player MOD aka MTA San Andreas, at first it was fast but update after update provided more in-game features at the expense of more system resources.. it was just too much, even with over-clocking. Still, S939 was a hell of a run.. over 12 years solid use on something that didn't cost a lot to begin with. It must be the same for a lot of Core 2 Duo owners. And I am not into bragging rights regarding the latest tech.. whatever you choose, if it works for your needs then that's all that matters, right? Your enjoyment.

    Footnote: Later on I was required to update a bunch of Intel-based SFF rigs, and the highest they could go was E8600; however, I noticed how much cheaper the E8500 (3.13 GHz) was (around £5), so grabbed a bunch.. nice speed boost that runs very cool, albeit still being dogged by the lacklustre onboard Intel GMA graphics..

  3. I got a E6550 and overclocked it to 3,2ghz while my friend got the Q6600. Mine ended up being used for a decade as when I upgraded to Sandy Bridge my parents took over the C2D. It was such an amazing CPU. Even with a huge OC I had it undervolted and cooled passively by one of the early tower coolers and it still ran fine. I gave it away last year as the Antec P182 case it was in was huge and heavy and I didn't have space for it. Kind of regret it a bit though. It was my first PC I got where I cared about the case and motherboard. Usually those components were seen as not important compared to the CPU and GPU but the quality of the MB and case was certainly there. In many ways the case felt more high end than many today with very thick panels that really kept the noise down.

  4. I finally tore down my Core 2 Quad yesterday. A QX9650 on an Asus P5Q with 8GB of 1066 DDR2 and a 4GB Gigabyte 750 TI. Easily overclocked to 4.2 GHz with a Noctua NH-D15 but I hadn't powered this beast on in almost 6 months and I needed the room. Still hurt to disassemble.

  5. My daily driver, for web browsing, word processing and casual gaming is a Core 2 Duo 8400; I've got a matched pair (HP small form factor boxes), one running Mageia Linux 8 and the other W10. I'm typing this from the Linux one.

  6. In about 2008 I built a computer for Autocad using an E8600. Most apps back then only used one core so you wanted the fastest cores you could get. Mine was easy to overclock to 4 GHz using an air cooler, I recall that people could get them to 7GHz using liquid nitrogen. I bought a Q9400 to use at home and found that I could overclock it to 3.8GHz or more so there wasn't much advantage to the E8600. I still use the Q9400 all day every day.

  7. I play Witcher 3, Shadow of Mordor medium settings, shadow of war medium settings, Man of Medan 1024×768 low settings, and many other new titles on medium settings paired with an r9.270 with my e8600.

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