The summary of the transcript is:
- The speaker is testing a motherboard with two processors (E5 2623 V3) that he bought from Aliexpress and compares it with a single processor setup.
- He shows how to install the processors, update the BIOS, and enable the Turbo Boost feature to increase the clock speed.
- He runs some benchmarks (Cinebench, CPU-Z, Aida64) and shows that the dual processor setup has much higher performance in multithreaded tasks than a single processor or other Ryzen CPUs.
- He also tests some games (Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Far Cry New Dawn, Assassin's Creed Odyssey) and shows that the dual processor setup has lower performance in games than a single processor, because games are not optimized for this kind of configuration.
- He concludes that the dual processor setup is worth it only for video rendering or other tasks that require high processing power, but not for gaming. He also mentions the cost and power consumption of the setup and thanks his friends who helped him with the project.
Some possible facts extracted from the text are:
- The text is a transcript of a video about testing a motherboard with two processors.
- The motherboard is an x99 motherboard with lga2011 B3 that supports Zil and requires two identical processors.
- The processors used are E5 2623 V3, which have six cores and 12 threads each and can reach 3.2 GHz with Turbo Boost.
- The video shows benchmarks of the dual processor setup in programs like Cinebench, CPU-Z and AIDA64, as well as games like Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Far Cry New Dawn and Assassin's Creed Odyssey.
- The video compares the performance of the dual processor setup with a single processor setup and finds that the former is better for rendering and multitasking, but worse for gaming.
- The video also shows the power consumption of the dual processor setup, which is around 140 watts at full load, similar to some modern processors.
- The video mentions a computer assembly course and thanks some people who helped with the test.