برای مشاهده این لینک/عکس می بایست عضو شوید ! برای عضویت اینجا کلیک کنید ارسالی توسط hwcpmm برای مشاهده این لینک/عکس می بایست عضو شوید ! برای عضویت اینجا کلیک کنیدAnd then there are users who either play around with professional applications or are working as professionals while doing some gaming. Anyone working with photo manipulation, heavy-duty file compression, video encoding, and rendering tasks would be wise to consider an upgrade to the HWR CPUs (especially the 4690 and 4790) if running on Ivy Bridge chips or older. I'd still advise you to wait a bit and see what happens with Devil's Canyon over the course of the next 1-2 months, but if an upgrade is needed now, it's really not a bad option to go with the 4790 over even a 4770K when leaving the 4770K stock; in fact, the 4790 sees significant performance gains in photo editing tasks. The 4790 performs roughly 9% faster than the 4770K when executing build mesh operations, a 9.5% gain in WinRAR compression, and a 12.3% gain in HandBrake 2x4K framerate. These numbers can be pretty huge when you're making a living doing this type of action on a daily basis. They're much less noteworthy for the YouTube gaming hobbyist. Keep in mind that this is with a stock 4770K. If you're comfortable overclocking, the 4770K could be clocked to likely outperform the 4790.
The short of it: Haswell Refresh chips aren't anything to break the bank over. They're small, notewrothy advancements if you're on an 8-series chipset (or 9-series) and unhappy with your current low-end HW CPU, but I wouldn't call home about the gains. The story changes a bit for professional applications dealing in photo and video manipulation, at which point I'd seriously consider an upgrade if my income depended on efficiency at a reasonable price-point.
Is Intel's Haswell Refresh Worth It? 4790, 4690, 4360 vs. The Current Gen | Gamers Nexus - Gaming PC Builds & Hardware Benchmarks






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