Testseek.at haben 214 Experten-Bewertungen der Intel Core i9 10900K 3.7GHz Socket 1200 und die durchschnittliche Bewertung beträgt 81% erhoben. Blättern Sie nach unten und sehen Sie alle Beiträge zu Intel Core i9 10900K 3.7GHz Socket 1200.
May 2020
(81%)
214 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Experten, die dieses Produkt bewertet haben.
Nutzer
(89%)
1520 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Produktbesitzern.
810100214
Tests
seite 6 von 22
Sortierung:
Punktzahl
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-20, Autor: Bill , Testbericht von: techradar.com
Good single-core performance, Good thermal performance
High power consumption, No PCIe 4.0, Falls behind in multi-threaded workloads, Needs a Z490 motherboard to work
The Intel Core i9-10900K is the biggest example of what "too little, too late" means. While this processor does iterate successfully on 2018's Intel Core i9-9900K, it doesn't do enough to justify its existence in the current desktop PC market.While the $4...
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-20, Autor: Mike , Testbericht von: trustedreviews.com
Impressive single-threaded performance, Decent gaming pace, Good performance in day-to-day work, Chipset with upgraded networking,
Unable to beat rivals in multi-threaded tests, Pricier than the competition, Expensive ecosystem, No native PCI-E 4.0 support,
The Core i9-10900K is fast in games, single-threaded tasks and day-to-day jobs, but it's unable to outpace the cheaper AMD Ryzen 9 3900X in tougher workloads, and it's never dominant in gaming either. Intel's chip is expensive, its ecosystem is sometimes...
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-20, Autor: Peter , Testbericht von: eteknix.com
The new Intel CPUs launched alongside their new Z490 motherboard series. We've tested a LOT of boards today, and you can check out there reviews here. The only thing we didn't get with these CPUs in PCIe Gen 4, albeit pretty much all of the motherboards a...
10 cores, 20 threads for the mainstream, Class-leading gaming credentials, Solid multithreaded performance, Hyperthreading across the stack
10900K uses plenty of power, Requires investment in new motherboard, 10600K feels like an 8700K OC, Stuck on PCIe 3.0
Intel's response to the AMD Ryzen onslaught has been to leverage existing technology and fabrication capabilities in a way that better enables it to compete at various price points of the mainstream consumer market.Three aspects are apparent immediate...
Excellent Turbo Boost Frequency, Offers excellent overall performance, Cheaper than Coffee Lake counterparts, Supports up to 128GB DDR4, Responds well to overclocking
Thermals still above the competition, Does not support PCIe 4.0 specification, Less cores/threads than the competition
It's hard to believe that Intel's 9th Gen arrived in Q4 2018. Some would argue the 9th Gen. platform with its Z390 chipset was short-lived, we just hope that Z490 and LGA1200 has more longevity.As with other releases, upgrading to Intel's 10th Gen. makes...
Intel knows that it doesn't have the technology arsenal to really move the performance of its 10th Gen processors enough to topple rival AMD from its mainstream perch. The chip giant does what it can be increasing the core-and-thread count for the i9 chip...
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-20, Autor: Paul , Testbericht von: tomshardware.co.uk
Lower per-core pricing, Leading gaming performance, Strong in both single- and multi-threaded applications,
Power consumption, Thermal output and cooling requirements, PCIe 3.0 interface, Little overclocking headroom, Requires new motherboard
Intel's ten-core 20-thread Core i9-10900K cements itself as the fastest gaming processor on the market and comes at a reasonable price, but the extra performance comes at the cost of incredibly high power consumption...
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-22, Autor: Darren , Testbericht von: futurefive.co.nz
Zusammenfassung: Intel's new 10th generation desktop CPUs are here. We've spent the last week taking a good look at the Core i5-10600K and the flagship i9-10900K. The i5 and i9 Comet Lake microprocessors are based on Intel's 2015 14nm SkyLake microarchitecture. Anyone thi...
Veröffentlicht: 2020-05-20, Autor: Gordon , Testbericht von: pcworld.co.nz
If you were expecting Intel's 10th-gen to hammer Ryzen 3000 CPUs, you were wrong. Intel's creaky 14nm fabrication process can't fully stand up against AMD's (and TSMC's) 7nm, and Intel was never going to offer more multi-core performance than AMD's chips...
Zusammenfassung: It has been almost 10 months since the launch of AMD's third-generation Ryzen processors, and those chips have been dominating Intel's offerings. Intel was sitting there hoping that their Coffee Lake CPUs like the Core i9-9900K would compete against the b...