Launched over a decade ago,Watch Too Cute! Super Rare! She Was Crazy About The Cats On A Date At A Cat Cafe Online 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.
Border agents can search phones without a warrant, court rulesApple Maps will soon let you report accidents and speed trapsParler is back after going dark for a monthSwiping for friends: Why managing others' dating apps is so damn funUber riders might be able to hail selfApple talked to Nissan about Apple Car, report saysClubhouse issues security update over Chinese dataLego's interactive quiz teaches kids online empathyA math legend just died. He literally reinvented aspects of modern math.Netflix's 'Behind Her Eyes' is an unpredictable mystery thriller with a dark twistGen Z doesn't own the middle part. No one does.How to spot signs of alien life13 Halloween costume ideas for your most exotic petsThe 14 best tweets of the week, including English teachers, the Grink, and vibing with a husbandMastercard will support cryptocurrency payments this yearPrecious little superfan gets a unique Batman doll made just for herUse words to drive exploding cats from your lawn in The Oatmeal's mobile gameHow to invest your retirement in environmentally friendly fundsApple talked to Nissan about Apple Car, report says'To All the Boys: Always and Forever' is the perfect farewell to Lara Jean Staff Picks: Melancholia, Music, and Meaning by The Paris Review A Swift Arrow’s Flight by Susan Choi Freedom from Sugarcane Hell: An Interview with Vinod Busjeet by Parul Kapur Hinzen Take Place by Terry Tempest Williams No Balls, No Nets by Kyle Beachy Cooking with Mary Shelley by Valerie Stivers New, Tender, Quick: A Visit to the Elizabeth Bishop House by Henri Cole Allowing Things to Happen: An Interview with Tyshawn Sorey by Craig Morgan Teicher Oranges by Jordan Kisner Poetry Is Doing Great: An Interview with Kaveh Akbar by Craig Morgan Teicher Redux: The Runner Trying to Disappear by The Paris Review The Review’s Review: A Happy Pig by The Paris Review Walking with Simone de Beauvoir by Annabel Abbs Bezos as Novelist by Mark McGurl Organic Video by The Paris Review The Review’s Review: Social Media in Reverse by The Paris Review Redux: Merely a Mask by The Paris Review Redux: The Storm before the Calm by The Paris Review Jamaica Kincaid Will Receive Our 2022 Hadada Award by The Paris Review Remembering Jan Morris
1.1005s , 10103.0703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Too Cute! Super Rare! She Was Crazy About The Cats On A Date At A Cat Cafe Online】,Pursuit Information Network