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Intel Core i7 3960X (Sandy Bridge E) Review: Keeping the Hi

 
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 PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 9:00 am    Post subject: Intel Core i7 3960X (Sandy Bridge E) Review: Keeping the Hi Reply with quote Back to top

<p>
If you look carefully enough, you may notice that things are changing. It first became apparent shortly after the release of Nehalem. Intel bifurcated the performance desktop space by embracing a two-socket strategy, something we'd never seen from Intel and only once from AMD in the early Athlon 64 days (Socket-940 and Socket-754).</p>
<p>
LGA-1366 came first, but by the time LGA-1156 arrived a year later it no longer made sense to recommend Intel's high-end Nehalem platform. Lynnfield was nearly as fast and the entire platform was more affordable.</p>
<p>
When Sandy Bridge launched earlier this year, all we got was the mainstream desktop version. No one complained because it was fast enough, but we all knew an ultra high-end desktop part was in the works. A true successor to Nehalem's LGA-1366 platform for those who waited all this time.</p>
<p align="center">


<em>Left to right: Sandy Bridge E, Gulftown, Sandy Bridge</em></p>
<p>
After some delays, Sandy Bridge E is finally here. The platform is actually pretty simple to talk about. There's a new socket: LGA-2011, a new chipset Intel's X79 and of course the Sandy Bridge E CPU itself. Read on for our review!</p>

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Source: AnandTech
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