The leaked score of 1807 points in a single-core benchmark appears to confirm this. The processor also scored 10673 points in the multi-threaded benchmark. The processor was tested in an existing 400-series motherboard from Gigabyte, the AORUZ 490 Master. This is because the new CPU series will also support the same LGA1200 socket as the Intel 10th Gen Core (Comet Lake-S) processor series. The motherboard may require a BIOS update though. Intel will also unveil its 500-series motherboards possibly at CES 2021 early next year. The Core i7-11700K is an 8-core and 16-thread CPU, similarly to 10700K. Comments deemed to be spam or solely promotional in nature will be deleted.Intel Core i7-11700K Score, Source: Geekbench Intel Core i7-11700K Specifications, Source: Geekbench The clock speeds actually appear to be lower (3.6 GHz/5.0 GHz) compared to Comet Lake (3.8 GHz/5.1 GHz), however, that did not prevent the CPU from being 34% and 19% faster in single and multi-core benchmark. Including a link to relevant content is permitted, but comments should be relevant to the post topic. A failure to comply with these rules will result in a warning and, in extreme cases, a ban.Comments complaining about the post subject or its source will be removed.Comments and usernames containing language or concepts that could be deemed offensive will be deleted.Discussions about politics are not allowed on this website. If you have any questions about the commenting policy, please let us know through the Contact Page.So much time has passed since the last big benchmark cheating scandal in 2013 that you’d be forgiven for thinking that the issue had gone away.VideoCardz Moderating Team reserves the right to edit or delete any comments submitted to the site without notice.VideoCardz has never been sponsored by AMD, Intel, or NVIDIA.In addition, please note that comments that attack or harass an individual directly will result in a ban without warning. We here at GameBench had certainly hoped so - after all, we originally built GameBench in order to help the mobile industry progress beyond this sort of behaviour, by allowing bloggers and enthusiasts to test real games and apps in order to provide a meaningful, uncheatable measurement of performance. However, according to the popular sites XDA and FrAndroid, benchmark cheating has now resurfaced - this time among the Chinese smartphone manufacturers OnePlus and Meizu, who are accused of trying to mislead potential customers through artificially inflated performance scores. OnePlus has responded quickly to the allegations, admitting that its latest phone - the OnePlus 3T - has been programmed to recognise the launch of benchmarking apps like AnTuTu and GeekBench and then boost its processor clock speeds. In its defence, OnePlus says it will stop doing this in future builds of its OxygenOS. The manufacturer also insists that its boost mode has a genuine function, since it can be triggered by computationally intenstive games and apps in addition to just benchmarks.
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