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The Phenom 9600 Black Edition has been knocking around in Damage Labs for a while now, and Im afraid I havent done it justice. The Black Edition is an intriguing product in a number of ways, because its a relatively affordable quad-core processor wi...
Based on what we saw from our Phenom 9600 Black Edition, I wouldnt expect to see astounding overclocks out of these chips—at least not all of them. Of course, overclocking headroom is never a sure thing, and you might have more success than we did...
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fudzilla.com Updated: 2011-07-30 03:21:01
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We had a chance to play with Phenoms 9600 unlocked Black Edition and it failed to impress us, at least when it comes to overclocking. Back in November, yours truly managed to overclock engineering sample 9900 from 2.4GHz to 2.8 GHZ stable and 2.915GH...
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Its a classic Hollywood script- AMD, the underdog, came out of nowhere with the Athlon64 and captured the hearts of the enthusiast and a reasonable market share from the 800lbs gorilla that Intel is. Not only did AMD do well on the desktop but even the...
I recently asked an Intel employee how they felt about AMDs true Quad-Core architecture compared to Intels two dual-cores stuck together. I liked his answer- "Show me the performance improvements or energy efficiency. We will introduce a native Quad...
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computershopper.com Updated: 2011-07-30 03:21:11
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AMDs Phenom, the companys long-awaited 65-nanometer quad-core successor to the dual-core Athlon X2, has finally arrived. AMD enthusiasts hoping that the company would steal the performance crown back from Intels Core 2 chips will be dis...
Socket AM2+ design enables upgrade path for Athlon X2 users; inexpensive for a quad-core CPU; independent memory controller simplifies overclocking; paired with inexpensive, low-power-usage motherboard chipset...
Slower performance with comparably priced Intel Core 2 Quad chips; SSE4a multimedia instructions incompatible with Intels SSE4 instructions; erratum in first chip models slows operations...
Though faster in multicore-aware programs than most dual-core chips, AMDs first round of Phenom processors fall behind Intels quad-core offerings...
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Behardware.com Updated: 2011-07-30 03:21:23
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December 3, 2007 Launched in September 2003, the Athlon 64 was a true success. AMD had an architecture that was extremely efficient compared to its rival, Intel, whether it was in terms of brute performances or performance / power consumption ratios...
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Today, you can actually go out and buy . As noted in his earlier , AMD is shipping its Phenom 9500 (2.2Ghz) and Phenom 9600 (2.3GHz) CPUs. A Phenom 9600 will set you back about $275—not too shabby for a quad-core CPU. In fact, that $275 puts it in...
Rich feature set and potentially good tweaking capability.
Seems a little pricey for CPUs that are still only modest performers.
New BIOS updates cure stability issues, making the M3A32-MVP a solid choice for Phenom users...
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Phenom is here. Today, you can actually go out and buy AMD "true quad core" Phenom CPUs. As Jason Cross noted in his earlier Phenom preview, AMD is shipping its Phenom 9500 (2.2Ghz) and Phenom 9600 (2.3GHz) CPUs. A Phenom 9600 will set you back about...
Four cores on a single die. Potentially efficient multicore scaling.
Lower performance than the equivalent Intel CPU.
Phenom is finally here, but seems six months late and still a work in progress...
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Phenom 9600: Good for Upgrades, but is it worth it for new systems? Finally we are able to bring you some Phenom benchmarks! After Phenom launched a few weeks ago, we were able to get our hands on a Phenom 9600 2.3GHz Quad Core processor and I did ext...
We wish to thank NCIX for lending us the Phenom 9600 and motherboard we used in this review. Testing the Phenom 9600 has been interesting. The BIOS and CPU-Z agreed on the speed of the processor, but AMDs Overdrive utility showed the "actual" speed a...
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Today marks one of the most pivotal days in AMDs recent history -- the launch of their new desktop core architecture to replace the ever-lasting and ever-loved Athlon 64 core. Since 2003, the on-die memory controller and 64-bit addressing have made...
I have no doubts that many readers of this review fill find it disappointing that AMDs Phenom processors were not competitive with Intels high-end quad-core processors. Its hard to hide my own disappointment as I personally really wanted AMD to do...
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If youre reading this article, chances are you already know at thing or two about Phenom processors. After all, theyve been in development for years, and AMD has been talking about them publicly for quite some time. In fact, weve even reviewed the e...
The Phenom quite obviously isnt a bad CPU design, given the way it performs on a per-clock basis and how its performance scales from one to four threads. In many cases, its enhanced execution cores crank out some solid gains in instructions per clock...
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