![]() ![]() So we are going to be cautious about this data, but it does seem to be quite reliable, since it would be from a commercial processor. These processors are usually almost identical to the ones that end up reaching the market, although there could be some change or modification along the way. They are just preliminary data as always, although in this case, it would be based on a definitive model, while the rest would be based on 'Intel Confidential' processors, processors quite similar to those that have just been launched on the market. The CPU-Z has also been passed, which despite not looking good at all, seems to score 13680 points in multicore and 2245 points in mononucleus, although the truth is that the images look horribly bad. Specifically, it has been passed in Cinebench R15, with a single core score of 196cb and in mono core it has given 1230cb. This is all quite humorous, as even the HP rep is on the side, staring at the Canadian journalist, undeterred. This computer did not have, according to Morin commented, so he quickly looked for a monitor and passed some benchmarks, to see how this processor performs. Another benchmark has been leaked, well, in this case three new benchmarks, in this case by Karl Morin, a Canadian journalist specialized in technology who has had access to a clone desktop computer, specifically an HP Omen, which has with the Core i7 8700K processors, about which we know little else. Ryzen 7 3700X Ryzen 7 2700X Core i7 9700K CineBench R20 1T 494 408 498 CineBench R20 MT 4730 3865 3922 Handbrake h.264 35.05fps 27.31fps 28.77fps Handbrake. It launches on the 5th of October, at an expected price of around USD 380, if not more. New benchmarks of the Intel Core i7 8700K processor, in this case in the Cinebench R15 and in the CPU-Z, this time filtered by an HP Omen computer that would carry this processor.Ī few minutes ago we echoed the appearance in Geekbench 4, a new benchmark of the Intel Core i7 8700K processor, Intel's first six-core processor for gaming. The Core i7-8700K sits at the top of Intel's stack of new mainstream consumer chips, above the six-core, six-thread Core i5-8400 that we tested in tandem with this chip, and edging out the. The i7-8700K features 6 cores, 12 threads enabled by HyperThreading, Intels newest Turbo Boost Max 3.0 technology introduced with its Core X family, and 12 MB of 元 cache.
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