Bearing Intel
2008
Bearing Intel

Is there a difference between Core and Core 2?
I saw tha processor family, is there a differnece between them? And, is the core of a family Intel? "I was born Nov.12 1989
Richard is actually wrong … Core2 not neccsarily 2 cores. Intel was named "Core 2 Solo" which were designed specifically for laptops, but they were of a single center. "Core2 Duo" is dual core, but only "Core 2" is not neccesarilly dual core CPU. Somewhat confused … Intel also released the Core 2 Extreme (dual core) and, of course, Core 2 Quad (four cores). And yes, both are produced by Intel. I hope that helps.
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Dynatron CPU Fan Heatsink Cooler 2x Ball Bearing for Intel Xeon Socket 771 $29.98 |
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Noctua NH-U12DX LGA 1366 for Intel Xeon 5500 CPU Cooler SSO Bearing Copper alumi $67.78 |
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Zalman CPU Cooler CNPS9900ALED 2-Ball Bearing Multi Socket For AMD and Intel CPU $63.85 |
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Noctua NH-U12DX LGA 1366 for Intel Xeon 5500 CPU Cooler SSO Bearing Copper alumi $68.99 |
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Zalman CPU Cooler CNPS9900ALED 2-Ball Bearing Multi Socket For AMD and Intel CPU $64.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $4.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $4.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $2.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $0.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $0.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $4.89 |
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INTEL COPPERMINE 4 PIN AC 300 BALL BEARING FAN $10.00 |
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Masscool 8WT15-38 Intel LGA775 Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $12.19 |
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Masscool 8W5020F1M Intel LGA1155/1156 Copper Base Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $17.34 |
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Masscool 8WT15-38 Intel LGA775 Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $12.19 |
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Masscool 8W5020F1M Intel LGA1155/1156 Copper Base Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $17.34 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel WHT $2.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $2.89 |
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Noctua CPU Cooler NH-C14 with Dual SSO-Bearing Fans, for major Intel and AMD CPU $83.55 |
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Intel Pentium 4 Heatsink Ball Bearing Fan socket 478 10.73653 $32.99 |
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Intel Pentium 4 Heatsink Ball Bearing Fan socket 478 10.73653 $32.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $0.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $0.99 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $2.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $4.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $4.89 |
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Quiet 80mm LED Case Fan Sleeve Bearing 3/4Pin Intel Red $4.89 |
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Noctua NH-U12DX LGA 1366 for Intel Xeon 5500 CPU Cooler SSO Bearing Copper alumi $83.50 |
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Masscool 8W5020F1M Intel LGA1155/1156 Copper Base Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $17.34 |
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Masscool 8WT15-38 Intel LGA775 Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $12.19 |
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Brand New Dynatron P61G 2U CPU Fan For Intel Socket 775 Double Ball Bearing $25.56 |
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Masscool 8WT15-38 Intel LGA775 Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $12.19 |
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Masscool 8W5020F1M Intel LGA1155/1156 Copper Base Long Life Bearing CPU Cooler $29.33 |
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Brand new Dynatron T191 1U CPU Fan For Intel Socket Double Ball Bearing CPU Fan $17.97 |
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Zalman CPU Cooler CNPS9900ALED 2-Ball Bearing Multi Socket For AMD and Intel CPU $71.99 |
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Noctua NH-U12DX LGA 1366 for Intel Xeon 5500 CPU Cooler SSO Bearing Copper alumi $75.99 |
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ASUS LION SQUARE INTEL/AMD 92mm Vapo Bearing CPU Cooler $50.00 |
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Zalman CPU Cooler CNPS9900ALED 2-Ball Bearing Multi Socket For AMD and Intel CPU $78.58 |
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Dynatron H46G Intel Xeon socket 771 2U Active Solution 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $33.61 |
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Dynatron G199 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 1U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $26.50 |
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Dynatron G555 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $34.48 |
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Dynatron G650 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $30.35 |
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Dynatron G666 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $33.66 |
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Dynatron G199 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 1U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $37.49 |
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Dynatron G555 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $45.47 |
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Dynatron G650 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $41.34 |
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Dynatron G666 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $44.65 |
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Dynatron H46G Intel Xeon socket 771 2U Active Solution 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $44.60 |
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Dynatron G199 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 1U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $26.50 |
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Dynatron G555 Intel Xeon 5600/5500 socket 1366 2U 2 Ball Bearing CPU Cooler $34.48 |
However, another set of chips from Intel that obviously appear to be a bit unhappy with the 10 or so chipsets have been released in the past year. The P45 is basically a reduced version, lower-priced version of the grand final X48 chipset based boards. Also set to be the last shot-775 chipset until the release of the long awaited Nehalem series later this year.
So what makes the P45 better than its predecessor, P35? First, the UPS system bus P45 to a maximum 1600 MHz 1333 MHz over the P35, which in turn makes overclocking a little more space to play. It also has PCI-Express 2.0 support, double bandwidth graphics and supports Intel's 45nm processors based on the latest, most effective and slightly more powerful Core 2 chips. It has also ICHlO the southbridge, which includes a 10GB Ethernet controller and integrated wireless support, while leaving the aging PS / 2 and LPT ports.
Asus has a reputation as one of the most innovative companies in the market – the Eee to be a witness to this – and this latest luxury PSQ is no exception. The board is well-established, with custom, aesthetically pleasing black PCB. And oddly enough, we had no cutting our fingers-in-salami problems with the cooling fins as you install the CPU fan. One of the most brilliant innovations Asus (actually, forget the Eee) has to be the power and reset buttons built into the motherboard itself mother – immensely useful for test-overclocker bank or if you simply have teething problems.
Fighting Power
Moreover P45 chipset, Asus has packed the EPU-Six Engine in the PSQ Deluxe. This energy saving system controls the power consumption of the processor, graphics card, memory, chipset, hard drives and CPU fan, and automatically adjusts for different application environments. So if you're just surfing the net change in savings Power mode, but when you start Crysis will go into turbo mode. The settings can be adjusted on the fly, and even tells you how many milligrams of carbon monoxide did is pumping into the atmosphere. Asus says it can save significantly on electricity bills is likely to please some polar bears.
At the top of the energy saving features, Asus has incorporated its Splashtop Instant-On OS on the motherboard. One of those "why not think of this sooner? "ideas, Splashtop is a Linux installation as it allows access to the Internet through a customized version of Firefox, chat with Skype and a basic photo browser. Very little power, but when one is desperate for a quick map or movie times is immensely helpful. Also get deployed the full range of mobo everything stored on a chip in the upper and offering HD installation via CD of support in the rest.
The Splashtop software is based on the motherboard in luxury. With its 512 MB of RAM dedicated themselves no need to worry about not being able to get on the net when they are fried in the disc hard. ASUS also promoting this as an energy saving feature, as users are less likely to leave their PCs running if they know that the website will start in seconds.
Although a bit large software, still needs some polish – were not identified in our mouse Microsoft and we were around the different menu tab. A BIOS upgrade should fix that, and given time we could see an evolved version of Splashtop revolutionize how we use PCs.
Against all odds
Therefore saving energy and innovation into one, but how the platform P45 do? We tested it against the Intel P35 and X38 chipsets and Nvidia's 790i chipset, and the performance was surprisingly underwhelming. It's not bad, is simply impressive. The biggest surprise here is that the P35 slightly exceeded the P45 in the RAM and processor tests – although this may be to early driver issues. But impressive for a council at this price, 3D performance actually only slightly behind ASUS holy-than-though overpriced, but the striker 790i-II. And that is without no overclocking.
Compared to the X38 we have seen significant improvements in all areas, which is surprising when one considers that Intel was promoting a high end chipset only a year ago. Even the P35 was able to overcome the X38. Hopefully the Nehalem not go through the minds of many repetitions bogglingly useless, but Intel seems to be trend du jour.
It is also worth noting that, although the P45 chipset supports DDR3 RAM, the P5Q Deluxe only supports DDR2. All motherboard manufacturers have launched their P45 boards in a range of budget stripped expensive fully-featured, and the P5Q Deluxe is more towards the value end of the spectrum, so DDR3 is not for us. Although, given the ridiculous prices and minimum performance gain of DDR3, which does not seem worth it.
If you have a P35-based card is probably not worth upgrading to this. But if you have anything less, and that is after a competent motherboard solid, with many useful features, the P5Q Deluxe is definitely worth considering.
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Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Asus P5q Deluxe
Intel Room Sentry Rape
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