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  2. Alder Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alder_Lake

    Alder Lake's CPU topology has performance implications, especially for gaming environments where the developers are not used to NUMA setups. Microsoft added support for Intel Thread Director (ITD) in Windows 11. [18] [35] A wide variety of inputs, including whether a process' window is in the foreground, feeds into the ITD. [36]

  3. Coffee Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_Lake

    Coffee Lake processor die from an i7-8700K with 6 cores. Coffee Lake CPUs are built using the second refinement of Intel's 14 nm process (14 nm++). [6] It features increased transistor gate pitch for a lower current density and higher leakage transistors that allows higher peak power and higher frequency at the expense of die area and idle power.

  4. List of AMD Ryzen processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_AMD_Ryzen_processors

    All the CPUs support DDR4-2933 in dual-channel mode, except for R7 2700E, R5 2600E, R5 1600AF and R3 1200AF which support it at DDR4-2666 speeds. All the CPUs support 24 PCIe 3.0 lanes. 4 of the lanes are reserved as link to the chipset. No integrated graphics. L1 cache: 96 KB (32 KB data + 64 KB instruction) per core. L2 cache: 512 KB per core.

  5. Celeron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celeron

    The CPU has 800 MT/s FSB, 65 W TDP and uses 512 KB of the chip's 2 MB L2 cache, significantly limiting performance for uses such as gaming. New features to the Celeron family included full enhanced halt state and enhanced Intel SpeedStep technology.

  6. Duron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duron

    Duron logo. Duron is a line of budget x86-compatible microprocessors manufactured by AMD and released on June 19, 2000. Duron was intended to be a lower-cost offering to complement AMD's then mainstream performance Athlon processor line, and it also competed with rival chipmaker Intel's Pentium III and Celeron processor offerings.

  7. Gaming computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaming_computer

    A gaming computer, also known as a gaming PC, is a specialized personal computer designed for playing PC games at high standards. They typically differ from mainstream personal computers by using high-performance graphics cards , a high core-count CPU with higher raw performance and higher-performance RAM .