The Intel Core i7 860 Review

by Anand Lal Shimpi on September 18, 2009 12:00 AM EST

SYSMark 2007 Performance

Our journey starts with SYSMark 2007, the only all-encompassing performance suite in our review today. The idea here is simple: one benchmark to indicate the overall performance of your machine.

SYSMark 2007 - Overall

The Core i7 860, as expected, falls right in between the i5 750 and the i7 870. The overall performance impact of slightly faster clock speeds and Hyper Threading is small, it's only in the individual cases that you see large gains from the feature. Most applications have difficulty stressing four cores, pushing eight threads isn't any easier.

SYSMark 2007 - E-Learning

SYSMark 2007 - Video Creation

SYSMark 2007 - Productivity

SYSMark 2007 - 3D

Index Adobe Photoshop CS4 Performance
Comments Locked

121 Comments

View All Comments

  • iwodo - Sunday, September 20, 2009 - link

    Well, it will defiantly sell well in terms of OEM market. Since they will sell the same amount of PC, and Intel will be pushing Lynfield into their throat anyway.

    I wont even called that Sales, it is more like tax on those OEM makers.

    I think it wont sell well in terms of Retail market.
  • IntelUser2000 - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    Ivy Bridge is a shrink of Sandy Bridge to 22nm. It's Haswell that will have FMA.
  • iwodo - Sunday, September 20, 2009 - link

    Yes. It is Ivy Beidge ( the shrink of Sandy Bridge ) for FMA.
    It was supposed to be for Sandy Bridge, but some changes delay it to Ivy Bridge. So unless they have postponed it AGAIN. it should be out with Ivy Bridge.
  • bigboxes - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    I know the basic archetecture of Lynnfield is superior to Bloomfield, but you are not using 6gb of tri-channel memory for the i920. That is where the i920 really shines. Is there a reason that you are not testing with 6gb of ram with the 920 other than apples to apples testing that needs to be done? Just curious.
  • the zorro - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    lynnfield has another gigantic bottleneck which is the dmi bus speed of only 2GBps, phenom 2 hypertransport speed is 41.6 GB/s which means that is 20 times faster than lynnfield when communicating with the chipset,that shows why phenom 2 is better than lynnfield. this is going to be a real problem in the next future.
  • silverblue - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    Actually, as HT 3.0 is limited to 16-bit width on AMD desktop boards, it's half that.
  • DigitalFreak - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    Next future? As opposed to the current future? I must thank you for all the laughs I get from reading your posts.
  • TA152H - Saturday, September 19, 2009 - link

    No offense, but you're clearly an idiot.

    You realize that in EVERY benchmark, the i7 860 was running at higher clock speeds than the i7 920. Sometimes by a lot, with turbo mode. Also, Anand uses inferior memory for the i7 920, to try to 'prove' the validity of the brain-damaged P55 platform.

    Despite his bad attempt, the i7 920 STILL outperformed it. If you clock them at the same rate, with the same uncore, it's only ugly for the Lynnfield.

    It's not superior. Well, in performance. It's got nice power characteristics, and it's cheaper to implement. But, your remark is purely idiotic.

    Where do you get stuff like this from?
  • Etern205 - Sunday, September 20, 2009 - link

    Lynnfields are categorizes as mainstream, therefore no matter how advanced their architecture is compared to Bloomfield, it won't out perform it. Intel purposely did this and you should know this by now, but I guess you don't care as your too busy sucking your own c0ck.


    "Your the kind of man that can be use as a blueprint to build a idiot".

  • bigboxes - Sunday, September 20, 2009 - link

    Sorry. I didn't mean to say anything that would warrant an "idiot" label. I have just been reading from Anand that the Lynnfield core is better than the Bloomfield. In all his testing he never uses 6gb of ram in his tests. I understand that he wants to measure the cpus on a level playing field, but when you put 6gb of pc1600 ram on an i920 those scores increase considerably. From what I understand that is something that the Lynnfield cannot achieve. Was just wondering if Anand could throw that (i920 w/6gb) into his charts. It seems that almost all Bloomfield owners are gonna be running 6gb (3x 2gb) and not 4gb. The i920 uses that extra bandwidth and it truly performs better when so equipped. I hope that makes more sense.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now