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- I love Intel as much as anyone. They make cool products, they engage in lots of community stuff, and I mean heck, theyamp;#39;re even a major sponsor of my other channel. But man, when it comes to confusing product naming schemes, I think Core i3, Core i5, Core i7 takes the cake. I mean, great question! What is a Core i7 479GK? What the heck does all of this even mean? Weamp;#39;ll get to that. But first a bit of background about why we need product names for processors. Wouldnamp;#39;t it be simpler to just label them with how many gigahertz they run at and call it a day? Simpler, sort of, but at times actually even more confusing. For example, when the Pentium 4 launched an equivalently clocked Pentium 3 was actually faster because it could do more work with each cycle. As a customer, I would expect the product with the higher number to be the better one! And therein lies the problem. Not all megahertz and gigahertz are created equal and rating products that way is about like ra