First INQpressions Intel E6700 and X6800
Theinquirer
Theinquirer
However, there is still one thing that disturbs me about the Intel Conroes. The load times on our Far Cry tests simply took ages, regardless of whether we used a NetWurst craptecture or Core marchitecture. AMD loads FarCry in a matter of seconds, and in this particular game, we feel like watching Athlon 64 to complete SuperPI after running Conroe for three years. B-o-o-o-ring. A big surprise for me was the fact that Quake 4 gameplay also experienced more hiccups on Conroe platform than it did on a competing AMD platform. After all, it is a fight between GeForce on an nForce motherboard and LinkBoost is a nice improvement as well.
Also, CPU-Z showed that it cannot get its act together when it comes to reporting the true clock speed of E6700. It reported flawless clocks for the X6800 and EE965/955, but E6700 was stuck at 1.6 GHz no matter what. Oddly enough, we transferred the installation of CPU-Z from the AMD test bed, but still no change.
Looking into the crystal ball
If the claim that "Intel makes great CPUs" is true, the claim "Intel sucks at motherboards" is true as well. Sadly, the testing was conducted with third revision of the very same motherboard. If you're investing in Conroe right now, bear in mind that your machine just might not support the future quad core Kentsfield CPUs, which are bound to use a 1.33GHz front side bus. To us, the safest bet for a Conroe based computer would be to hold out for an nForce4-SLI-16X or nForce 590 SLI based motherboard, but then there's ATI's plans, of course. We would also avoid betting your shirt on any of the 965 chipsets, since the lack of IDE controller and current zerg-rush bolting of UATA-133 support does not add to the corporate stable image Intel is trying to convey to its customers. Also, there is the small matter of Windows Vista compliance. But you do not want to buy these CPUs with integrated graphics.
First Thought: E6700
We think the Core 2 Duo and Extreme marchitectures are highly positive and gives consumers a real choice. E6700 offers great performance, and you no longer need to shell out $1,000 for a gamer CPU. Fifty three per cent of the price will be sufficient. $500 for a CPU may sound like a large sum of money, but we're talking about $500 that achieves the same or better performance than FX-62 which costs more than double the money. For the price of a single Athlon 64 FX-62, you get a CPU, an excellent cooler, a motherboard and a 7900GT graphics card. Did we say "better performance" as well? However, do not place four drives in RAID5 before the BIOS update or B-2 revision of CPU kicks in. There were some weird happenings, and they repeated on Bad Axe and ASUS P5W motherboards. We are waiting for a new motherboard with a non-Intel chipset, to get to the bottom of this.