VERDICT
It’s not as fast as we hoped at stock speeds, but the Core i5-8600K’s six cores take very well to overclocking
THE PAST FEW months in the desktop CPU market have been the most interesting in years. AMD finally made itself relevant again with the Ryzen 7, 5 and 3 lines, as well as the more enthusiast-focused Threadripper. Intel, whose laurel-resting was evident in the underwhelming Kaby Lake generation, responded with a range of premium Kaby Lake-X and Skylake-X chips that were so expensive that they were out of most people’s reach.
Not long after, Intel came up with even more surprises. First, its 8th-gen line-up would include not just the main 14nm Coffee Lake chips, but a series of updated ‘Kaby Lake refresh’ parts and even some 10nm Cannonlake designs. Second, the Coffee Lake Core series would be receiving an extra two cores across the board – so the successors to 7th-gen dual-core chips would be 8th-gen quad-core chips, and so on.
Hence, we have the Core i5-8600K, the headliner of Intel’s latest mid-range Coffee Lake CPUs. It replaces the Kaby Lake Core i5-7600K, and since that was a quad-core chip, this new part comes with six cores. Again, there’s no Hyper-Threading support, so it has six threads as well. The trade-off initially appears to be per-core speeds: the Core i5-8600K has a base clock speed of 3.6GHz, a slight drop from the i5-7600K’s 3.8GHz, although maximum Turbo Boost speeds have increased a tad, from 4.2GHz to 4.3GHz.
LIQUID’S IN
Since the extent to which Turbo Boost can increase clock speeds is dependent on thermal headroom, sufficient CPU cooling is, therefore, more important than ever, especially since Intel has crammed the extra cores on to a processor that’s physically no larger than its Kaby Lake predecessor. Indeed, it slots into the very same LGA 1151 socket, though the new Z370 chipset means that you’ll need to purchase a new motherboard regardless.
Denne historien er fra February 2018-utgaven av Computer Shopper.
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Denne historien er fra February 2018-utgaven av Computer Shopper.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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XIAOMI Mi Mix 3 5G
VERDICT This is the most affordable of the first 5G smartphones, but even with great hardware, the service isn’t yet worth the expense
RHA T20 Wireless
VERDICT They’re not cheap, but these well-designed earphones deliver superb sound quality
Protect And Preserve
Data might be A Valuable Commodity, But It’s Remarkably Easy To Lose Or For Others To Get Their Hands On. Mike Bedford Provides Guidance On How To Preserve, Recover And Destroy Data, And Looks At The Technologies Involved
NZXT H510i
VERDICT Some qualities shine through, but this is an underwhelming case from a maker we know can do better
Kicking Off A New Era Of Football?
With the new football season well and truly under way, David Crookes talks to Jon Hare about reviving the spirit of Sensible Soccer with a new, more sociable offering that he hopes will avoid an own goal
NAIM Mu-so 2
VERDICT A luxurious and fine-sounding slab of metal, but for most homes it won’t be worth the expense
Motorola One Vision
VERDICT The One Vision comes close to being a brilliant mishmash of tech – shame about the camera
JBL Xtreme 2
VERDICT With top-quality sound and a versatile design, this is a great – if expensive – rugged Bluetooth speaker
HUAWEI MateBook 13
VERDICT What the MateBook 13 lacks in flourish, it makes up for in value and performance
GIGABYTE X570 Aorus Master
VERDICT A loaded and forward-thinking motherboard, but not one that fully justifies its high price