Best offers
Exclusive Interview: Nvidia's Ian Buck Talks GPGPU
With Snow Leopard and Windows 7 both offering GPGPU capabilities, we wanted to talk to Nvidia's Ian Buck. Not only is he one of the fathers of Brook, the programming language ultimately adopted by AMD/ATI, but the head of Nvidia's CUDA group as well. Read More
-
Beamforming: The Best WiFi You’ve Never Seen
Forget 802.11n Draft 2.0. The future of video-capable WiFi depends on a signal-boosting technique called beamforming. We put the pioneers in this frontier through some real-world testing to find out which technology is going to change the wireless world. Read More
-
Exclusive Interview: Going Three Levels Beyond Kernel Rootkits
Today we have the pleasure of chatting with Joanna Rutkowska, one of the top computing security innovators in the world. She is the founder and CEO of Invisible Things Lab (ITL), a boutique computer security consulting and research firm. Read More
- core 2 duo benchmarks
- amd athlon and intel core 2 duo
- tom’s hardware guide
- processor toms hardware
- amd athlon 2 x2
- amd athlon 64 x2 benchmark
- toms hardware system
- how to overclock toms hardware
- processors toms hardware
- toms hardware processor benchmark
- intel core 2 duo benchmarks
- core 2 duo performance
- intel core 2 duo benchmark
- toms hardwares
- toms hardware power consumption
Partners
The Games selection
kids :
Bob
Throw bubbles so as to make the ones that appear in the game disappear. For this, use the Right / Left arrow keys to duck or move about, and the...
|
crazy :
PC Breakdown
What is worst than a Fatal Error occuring during a game you did not save? Unleash your rage at your PC in this game. Blow it to pieces, it feels so...
|
Sponsored links
Tom's Hardware: Core 2 Duo smokes AMD's Athlon 64 X2
Next news
Westlake Village (CA) - Just about two weeks ahead of the official launch, Core 2 Duo's true performance capability comes to light. In tests conducted by Tom's Hardware Guide, Intel's new processor delivered stunning results, outpacing its AMD rival in almost every discipline. For the first time in about two years, Intel is offering a superior desktop processor that may cause more than just a headache for AMD.
Click to see the Core 2 Duo (Conroe) test system slide show ...
Click to see all Core 2 Duo benchmark results ...
Core 2 Duo will be Intel's second processor based on the firm's new Core micro architecture. Following the Xeon 5100, formerly code-named "Woodcrest", Intel will unleash the desktop version of Core: The Core 2 Duo E6000 series ("Conroe") will officially debut on 27 July and if we believe some industry sources, Intel may be even announcing the mobile variant - and foundation for all three processors - Core 2 Duo T7000 ("Merom") on that day as well.
Conroes has been in mass production for several weeks and has been shipping for some time. Press analysts also had access to standard production samples, but were under a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) and therefore were prevented from publishing information relating to Core 2 Duo. These NDAs expired tonight and there will be a flurry of reports on whether the new processor is as good as Intel promised it to be.
Extensive benchmark testing by Tom's Hardware's engineers leaves no doubt that this answer has to be answered with a clear yes. Core 2 Duo does not only bring a substantial jump in performance, it also manages to surpass its AMD rival: The Intel chip dominates most benchmark disciplines and came out on top in 35 out of 37 tests. AMD's fastest processor still holds the crown in synthetic benchmarks.
Enthusiast may be glad to hear that Core 2 Duo can be easily overclocked - the Tom's Hardware sample ran at a stable 3.46 GHz - instead of the regular 2.93 GHz. Performance jumps drastically in some scenarios: For example, the chip breaks the 3000-point barrier in the CPU test of 3DMark06 for the very first time, approaches 9000 points in the CPU test of PCMark05 and almost 32,000 points in the SiSoft Sandra 2007 CPU Test - 58% more than AMD's fastest processor at 2.8 GHz.
Especially interesting is the way how Intel achieves this new level of processor performance. Tom's Hardware found that its Conroe system consumed less power than a comparable AMD system and up to 30% less power than a Pentium EE 965-based computer. The 18% clockspeed increase of the overclocked version resulted in a relatively modest 7% increase in overall system power consumption.
AMD already announced that it will be reacting to Core 2 Duo - however there will not be a faster processor for now: AMD intends to drop the prices of its processors in order to maintain its price/performance leadership. And while the competition between AMD and Intel will be heating up over the next months and both firms will be busy making each other's lifes miserable, consumers will be benefitting from a time of true innovation. We can't wait for AMD to counter Intel's Core 2 Duo.
Speak out in the TG Daily reader survey!
Source : Tom's Hardware US
- Core 2 Duo vs. Dual Core [CPU & Components]
- New Intel Core 2 duo notebooks [Laptops & Notebooks]
- Core 2 Duo & Socket AM2/K8L Discussion [CPU & Components]
- What is the difference between dual core and core 2 duo? [CPU & Components]
- bad benchmark result with my x1950 pro [Graphic & Displays]
Questions? Ask Tom's community!
Sponsored links
Related forums topics
- Intel's 'Overspeed protection' will limit Core i7 overclocks!!!!!!
- AMD pushes out three more triple-core chips!!
- CPU Buyers' Guide (updated 10 May 2008)
- Just got The Phenom 9850Be today!!!
- Huge Workstation Build
- Pentium D 960 @4.16 GHz vs QUAD CORE Q6700 @ 2.66 GHz in games
- Overclocking Setup
- :!: new ab9 pro e6400 system :!:
- RAM - FSB problems
- Dual Core Processors For Low-Power, High-Performance Desktops
- 4870X2 Problems
- Bluescreen of Death on my new computer
- Hiper Silver 200W PSU with ati x1900. Please reply
- Stuttttttttering even after new sound card...
