Intel Xeon E5-450 vs Intel N150

Compare Intel Xeon 4 core CPU vs Intel 4 core processor, specs and benchmark score. Which is the better CPU for gaming?

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Benchmark Score

Overall Score

A combined score of all workloads

1482 points
1546 points
4% slightly better overall score

Gaming Score

The raw gaming performance with a fast GPU

2746 points
2906 points
5% slightly better gaming score

Multitasking Score

Performance in workloads using up to 8 cores

1124 points
1186 points
5% slightly better multitasking score

Heavy Workload Score

Performance in workloads using up to 16 cores

1076 points
1150 points
6% slightly better heavy workload score

Free CPU Benchmark

Want to compare your processor against the Xeon E5-450 and the N150? Download our free and quick PC Performance Test.

Other Benchmarks

Blender score

Blender score

Cycles Render (Samples per minute)

19.01 points
31.61 points
66% significantly higher Blender score

Specifications

Cores

Number of physical processing units

4
Identical
4

Threads

Number of logical processing units

4
Identical
4

Clock Speed

Base frequency at which the chip operates

3.00 GHz
275% significantly higher clock speed
0.8 GHz

L2 Cache

Secondary embedded memory, slower than L1 cache

12 MiB
499% significantly more L2 cache
2 MiB

Other details

Rank

Ranking in the hardwareDB database

834th of 1,118
822nd of 1,118

Family

The product line

Xeon
-

Release date

The official date of release of this chip

2007 November
-

Xeon E5-450 vs N150 comparison

In our benchmarks, the N150 beats the Xeon E5-450 in overall performance. Furthermore, our gaming benchmark shows that it also outperforms the Xeon E5-450 in all gaming tests too.

Our spec comparison shows that they have an identical amount of cores and the same number of threads. Our comparison shows that the Xeon E5-450 has a significantly higher clock speed compared to the N150. In terms of cache, the Xeon E5-450 has significantly more L2 cache when compared to the N150

Modern CPUs generally have more logical cores than physical cores, this means that each core is split into multiple virtual cores, improving efficiency for parallel workloads. For instance, the Xeon E5-450 has the same number of threads as cores. This means the the CPU does not support hyperthreading.

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