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by paulmd
2564 days ago
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It depends on the use. For a home server or even a small office fileserver, you don't need massive threading capability, and in fact some of those low-core-count parts are fairly highly clocked, which makes them faster. For example in the 7000 series, the i3 7100 has a 3.9 GHz base clock and you have to go almost to the top Xeon (the equivalent of an i7) to get anything equivalent. And even then it's a turbo, not a base clock, so in principle the motherboard should not let you turbo forever (PL2 time limit may actually be enforced on a server chipset). Also depending on workload you may not even be able to exploit an increased threading capability anyway, without 10 GbE on the box, or link aggregation capability. |
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The Celeron and Pentium chips that have infiltrated entry-level servers are absolute trash though.