Testseek.com have collected 10 expert reviews of the Intel Pentium 4 EE 3.73 3.73GHz Socket 775 and the average rating is 80%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Pentium 4 EE 3.73 3.73GHz Socket 775.
(80%)
10 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: 1,000 Intel processors through the years Not many things are sure in this life, but fortunately there are a number of things you can count on like clockwork. The sun comes up in the morning, we all have to pay taxes and last but not least, the most expe...
Abstract: € 1000 door de jaren heen Er zijn een aantal zekerheden in het leven: de zon komt iedere dag op, je moet belasting betalen en de duurste op consumenten gerichte processor van Intel kost een kleine 1000 euro. Dat laatste is in ieder geval zo sinds Intel i...
If you remember, in our previous review on the Intel P6 660, we had mentioned that the Pentium 4 660 is at the top of Intels 64-bit family line, if we dont consider the existence of the Extreme Edition series at 3.73Ghz. Well, now is the time for t...
What the 3.73GHz Extreme Edition (and the 6xx series in general) brings to the table is more features that put them on the same playing field feature-wise as AMD, as well as putting together building blocks for their next round of processors. Intels ...
Abstract: INTEL 660 3.6Ghz & 3.73GHZ EXTREME EDITION 64BIT PENTIUM 4 PROCESSOR (28-02-2005) With Windows x64 Edition nearing its full release date, Intel has released their 64bit capable 6XX and Extreme Edition line of processors to tackle the new 64bit challen...
From the past few pages of benchmarks, its quite clear that the performance of the 3.73GHz EE is not what one would expect from Intel’s highest-end desktop CPU which is about 300Mhz faster than their previous EE CPU. This was bound to happen as Inte...
Only Slightly Faster than P43.46 GHz EE, Expensive, Runs Hot, No More L3 Cache
The Pentium 4-3.73 GHz Extreme Edition represents the new high-end of the Intel enthusiast scale, but its victory was by no means complete. The shift in architecture created something of a logjam at the top of the Pentium 4 Extreme Edition list, with ...
Abstract: Intel’s last major product release was its Prescott core, a revised implementation of the NetBurst micro-architecture, first introduced during the tail-end of 2000. With regard to clock frequency, Prescott took over where its predecessor, Northwood...
Abstract: Its no secret that Intel has occassionally been playing a bit of catchup this year in the desktop and workstation processor arena. AMDs Athlon 64 releases have recently positioned the company in the lead from a general performance standpoint. Additionally...