Often PC builders try to get essentially the most energy attainable into a particular setup. However Gordon Mah Ung, PCWorld Govt Editor and gleefully cackling agent of chaos, is aiming for one thing somewhat totally different with the newest PCWorld video. His “Island of Misfit Toys” construct, a Frankenstein monster of elements from a collection of cursed machines, is aiming to get the worst rating within the Cinebench benchmark.
Together with particular visitor Dr. Ian Cutress, Gordon offers a tour of his tortured machine. It’s powered by the Gigabyte P750GM, which has a popularity for exploding. The motherboard is an historic, forgotten BTX design from a Dell pre-built desktop, with a plastic shroud over the Celeron D processor that sucks in cooling airflow. That cooling setup makes it inconceivable to plug in a contemporary GPU, so Gordon needed to join a Radeon Fury X card with an NZXT PCIe riser cable…which has been recalled as a hearth hazard.
And the entire thing is working Home windows Vista Final on a 160GB spinning arduous drive. That is essentially the most low-power construct attainable, with a 64-bit desktop CPU and a PCIe port for discrete graphics. The components don’t slot in a case. It’s an absolute freakshow of a pc. And, as if its mere existence wasn’t painful sufficient, Gordon and Ian are going to torture it with Cinebench.
I gained’t spoil the outcomes of the video for you, however I’ll say that Gordon is attempting to beat (as in, rating decrease than) a Cinebench R15 single-thread rating of 17, which Ian achieved with the same PC a number of years in the past. For a degree of comparability, Intel’s newest flagship CPU will get a single-thread Cinebench R23 rating of round 2300. My home-built work desktop, with a 4-year-old mid-range CPU and a dozen working packages, manages 1006 with a most attainable rating of round 1275.
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