
Originally Posted by
simoko
the official line is: The cores are DISABLED for a reason: THEY FAILED FACTORY TESTS...some of which are defects in the silicon substrate, problems running at full frequency or a bug introduce during manufacturing...
what they don't tell you is that it is more financially sound to disable cores & sell them at the lower segment than just throwing them out...
for AMD...the best ones become quad-cores, while the rest w/ defects becomes X3's, X2's
for Intel...the dual cores w/ defective core becomes Celeron single core or the Core Solo series...for its quadcore lines they do not because they do not use a true quadcore design...its actually 2 dual core chips in one substrate...disabling core would hurt its performance...its true quadcore design starts w/ the Core i7...