Testseek.com have collected 135 expert reviews of the Intel Core i7 5775C 3.7GHz Socket 1150 and the average rating is 78%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Core i7 5775C 3.7GHz Socket 1150.
September 2015
(78%)
135 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(92%)
18 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
780100135
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Published: 2015-08-06, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
Since then, despite the perseverance of (or soon to be mildly delayed) Moore's Law, performance is measured differently. Efficiency, core count, integrated SIMD graphics, heterogeneous system architecture and specific instruction sets are now used due to...
Good performance, overclocks well, Z170 platform offers new features.
Not much faster than Haswell, still quadcore, no heatsink included, needs new motherboard and RAM
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(85%)
Published: 2015-08-02, Author: Eric , review by: futurelooks.com
Excellent Power to Performance Ratio, Capable Overclocker, Iris Pro HD6200 IGP Handles Most General Tasks
Power consumption was measured at the wall and temps monitored with Easy Tune. The system ran a full burn in benchmark for 30 minutes which is plenty of time given the warm ambient temps around here as of late.
The big question on everyone's mind is whether or not the Intel Core i7-5775C Broadwell is worth the upgrade. If you're on a previous gen Core i7-4770K Haswell or Core i7-4790K Devil's Canyon, the answer is honestly, no.The Broadwell processor does have t...
Published: 2015-07-24, Author: Marco , review by: hothardware.com
Iris Pro 6200 Graphics, Decent Performance, Large eDRAM Cache
Not As Fast As Higher-Clocked Intel Processors, Pricey
Intel Core i7-5775C Processor - Find It At AmazonThe Core i7-5775C is in a strange position. Because it has lower base and turbo clocks than some other Intel processors, it can't quite match their performance in CPU-centric workloads. In situation where t...
Abstract: For the past few weeks I've been testing out the Core i7 5775C on Linux as mentioned in a few posts up to this point. While there were some initial headaches on getting this socketed Broadwell CPU playing nicely under Linux, once working around those prob...
Published: 2015-07-20, Author: Paul , review by: hitechlegion.com
Intel Iris Graphics, Good Temperatures, Low Power Consumption, 1080p Gaming On Low settings With No Discrete GPU, L4 Cache, 14nm
Very Short LifeSpan, Anything Greater than 1st or 2nd Generation Core should wait for "Skylake"
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Published: 2015-07-20, Author: Tom , review by: overclock3d.net
Such is the importance of the Iris 6200 graphics that we've strayed from our usual format to bring you today's review. Usually we're only interested in how much performance can be squeezed from a CPU and how high the overclocking will go. At the risk of s...
So like I said Broadwell is an interesting launch. It isn't very often that a CPU gets launched this late in its cycle. Being late takes away a little of its excitement, especially because to fill in for its launch Intel introduced the 4790K, a monster o...
Abstract: Earlier this week I posted some interesting Linux graphics benchmarks comparing the open-source Mesa/Gallium3D drivers for the Iris Pro 6200 Graphics on the Intel Core i7-5775C "Broadwell" CPU compared to several discrete graphics cards. Those results wer...
Published: 2015-07-17, Author: Ron , review by: modders-inc.com
The new Broadwell i7-5775C is not for the typical discrete graphics card user/enthusiast/overclocker crowd that much is obvious, but the question still remains, who is this processor for? It is easy to be myopic when you are deep in enthusiast circles and...