An overclocker has pushed Intel's new Core i9-10900K Comet Lake CPU to a new world record.
Intel Core i9-10900K + Liquid Helium = 7.707 GHz Record : Read more
Intel Core i9-10900K + Liquid Helium = 7.707 GHz Record : Read more
Probably a typo in the URL caused it. Make a mistake like writing i7 instead of i9, and the only way to correct it is to change the URL, which requires a few shenanigans on our CMS.I've noticed that here have been a few instances of a News item getting posted, then getting posted again sometime later the same day.
1.1v in cpuz is the vid. I'm sure they were pushing more like 1.9v
That 8+ Ghz is for a single core this was for all core.Theres a problem with this post.
It's outright BS because the world record is higher and not from an Intel cpu.
Sry to burst the fanboy bubble but look it up.
It's been at least 1ghz higher than this since 2014.
Of course, you've probably heard of higher overclocks before. It's worth noting that with the core race pushing core counts up rapidly, it's become less feasible to run all cores at the same frequency. With many of today's modern and best CPUs packing so many cores, there is bound to be one among the lot that loses stability first, at which point the whole system crashes.
Therefore, seeing all of the i9-10900K's cores at a staggering 7707.62 MHz is simply jaw-dropping.
The problem with the post is that someone reading the headline is reading “record for the 10900K” as meaning “highest clock speed ever.” From the article text, which is quite old already (six months or more):Theres a problem with this post.
It's outright BS because the world record is higher and not from an Intel cpu.
Sry to burst the fanboy bubble but look it up.
It's been at least 1ghz higher than this since 2014.