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well, really it comes down to codes and processes that they run. I myself don't know the full "technical" difference.
But the "simple" way to put it between the i models:
i3 is for light gaming, light workload (office/facebook/etc.) 2-4 cores sometimes with hyperthreading
i5 is gaming, will work for more intense workloads normally just 4 cores
i7 basically for intense workloads. For example an i5 on a video that takes 1min to render, you might get it in 50 or 55 seconds. so in the long run it saves time. 4 cores with hyperthreading to fasten workload and have more things running.
i9 well...that I don't know much, but if its like the pattern I'd imagine maybe 6 cores with hyperthreading and faster times.
Hyperthreading is kind of like a mini core for each core
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