Intel
today announced an
advance in its enthusiast-level quad core processor family with new Intel
Core 2 Extreme processor QX6800, twelfth quad-core processor offering. It
runs at 2.93 GHz, the fastest native clock speed reached with Intel Core micro
architecture for the quad-core desktop.
QX 6800 is a 65 nanometre processor and has two times 4 MB cache. It works with FSB 1066 MHz and it will cost $1,199.
Some of
the hot titles such as Crytek's Crysis, Supreme Commander and Hellgate London
DirectX 10 titles are supposed to work better with this CPU. They should use
more than two CPU's but this is just in theory and we have to see about the
practical use.
People who
do video encoding for peaceful purposes will be happy with the new Quad core as
it should be up to 65 percent faster than the Intel Core 2 Extreme dual core. Adobe*,
Cakewalk*, DivX*, Sony Creative Software* should benefit from the quad core.
Phil Taylor, Flight Simulator Program Manager ex ATI chap
who works at Microsoft Game Studios said that "Flight Sim X SP1 greatly increases multi
core utilization and will scale as more threads are available leading to
reduced load times as well as frame rate improvements and greater visual
complexity during flight. In other words quad core should be better for games.