Testseek.com have collected 318 expert reviews of the Intel Core i7 3770K 3.5GHz Socket 1155 and the average rating is 87%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Core i7 3770K 3.5GHz Socket 1155.
April 2012
(87%)
318 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
At the point we are in the CPU wars Intel could very well just sit back and take a break. However we are not seeing this as they have really done some work on the Core i7 3770K. The new instruction set which combines some improved and new instructions alo...
Abstract: The much-anticipated Ivy Bridge release is finally here and we're bringing you a full review of Intel's brand new Core i7-3700K 3.5 GHz CPU along with Sandy Bridge Core i7-2600K comparisons, performance and benchmark analysis, plus overclocking info. Find...
Abstract: Ivy Bridge has been a Buzz word that has been tossed around the world, and one that has everyone in anticipation of just what the hell Intel has up their sleeves for the desktop environment, and finally the long awaited day has arrived where we can actual...
Ivy Bridge is a nice jump forward for Intel and its mainstream user group. Ivy Bridge will afford mainstream users the ability to get through heavy workloads faster using less power, allowing for cooler running systems and any IT guy will tell you that is...
Abstract: Intel goes 22nm with ‘Ivy Bridge’ 3rd-generation Core processorsSpring time has arrived, and that can only mean one thing: Ivy Bridge is here! Okay, so it also means fighting the temptation to turn on the air conditioning for even slightly elevated tem...
No doubt, the new Ivy Bridge is an evolutionary step forward. Although no one promised any significant performance differences from the predecessors, Intel engineers managed to ensure a pretty significant, almost 10% performance gain compared with the...
After spending some time with Ivy Bridge we quickly discovered that Intel has raised the bar across the board for performance. Not bad considering that Ivy Bridge does not feature a brand-new microarchitecture and is basically a die shrink of Sandy Br...
Published: 2012-04-23, Author: Adam , review by: pcgamer.com
Abstract: Chin up CPU fans, Intel has launched its latest batch of processors out into the world today. On this fine anniversary of Shakespeare's birthday an infinite number of monkeys has been hard at work producing a replacement for the entire Core i7 and Core i5...
Abstract: Interestingly, Intel's own literature suggests the biggest beneficiaries of its 22nm process node will be server and smartphone processors. What Intel is saying is that its 22nm processors will bring lower power consumption and enable it to finally p...
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(70%)
Published: 2012-04-23, Author: Ali , review by: wccftech.com
It was a foregone conclusion that Ivy Bridge would be faster as compared to Sandy Bridge processors. The difference is as was expected, hovering between 10-15% depending on the application being run. The processor over-clocks just as well as previous proc...