Matlock said:Until I started digging through the new laptop, I was not aware of it being a dual processor job. The specs say it's a Pentium 4, 3 GHZ...And on the box, it says that it has hyperthreading technology.
BUT.
BUT.
Do dual processors cut down on the efficiency notably?
Matlock said:Until I started digging through the new laptop, I was not aware of it being a dual processor job. The specs say it's a Pentium 4, 3 GHZ...And on the box, it says that it has hyperthreading technology.
BUT.
BUT.
Do dual processors cut down on the efficiency notably?
Matlock said:Until I started digging through the new laptop, I was not aware of it being a dual processor job. The specs say it's a Pentium 4, 3 GHZ...And on the box, it says that it has hyperthreading technology.
BUT.
BUT.
Do dual processors cut down on the efficiency notably?
Felidae_Khrall said:Does having twice the processing power, cut down on effeciency? hmmmmmmmmmmm
Lathentar said:In a lot of cases yes, because you most likely won't be using both processors at all times. Or have a task which can't be done in parallel.
Matlock said:Hey, I've got WinXP Pro...but when I try using that, it kills the dialup modem driver.![]()
Matlock said:Hi, my name is Shogmaster and I cannot read.
Matlock said:I'm saying that installing XP Pro does not fucking recognize the phone modem. Only the networking (cat 5, et al) interface.
Shogmaster said:Did you track down the correct driver first? I don't see why XP Home works with it fine yet XP Pro does not..... Is there something about your Pro we should know about?![]()
Felidae_Khrall said:Why are you so fixated on Home? he never mentioned Home once. He doesn't use it.
Shogmaster said:I'd love the OS to let me tweek the way that the multiple threads are handled, so that even if the application is not multi-thread aware/capable, I can put the second processor to work.
For intance, I noticed that Painter bogs down when you do dual monitor. I'd love to get each processor to render each monitor. That would be sweet.
Shogmaster said:Did you track down the correct driver first? I don't see why XP Home works with it fine yet XP Pro does not..... Is there something about your Pro we should know about?![]()
CaptainABAB said:But that depends on whether one thread does the entire display or multiple are used. If Painter uses only one, you'd still be stuck. The app would have to be written to know that there are two displays and to split the work into two threads.
The advantages with dual cpus is that you can split your processing needs among the cpus, those not getting bogged down if one of them is busy. This comes in handy in two scenarios: running one cpu intensive program that uses multiple threads (like certain filters in adobe) or running two cpu intensive programs at the same time (compiling code while playing a game)
The disadvantage is that you pay twice the cost for benefits that are not 2x but more like 1.5 to 1.75x of one cpu. Also, if you have a laptop with two cpus (vs. a hyperthreaded p4), you would be using more battery and generating more heat. Almost no laptops have duallies.
myzhi said:Seems like some people don't know that even though Win XP Home only supports 1 logical(hardware) cpu, but it does in fact support 2 virtual cpu. Thus, since HT acts like 2 virtual cpu, Home edition does fully support it. Pro supports 2 logical and 4 virtual. Server supports 4 logical and 8 virtual.
SyNapSe said:So far HT has been mostly a waste unless you run some very specific apps, but I think some of the new games are going to be supporting it.
Maybe someone can throw in some info, but I thought Doom III was going to support multiprocessing.
SyNapSe said:So far HT has been mostly a waste unless you run some very specific apps, but I think some of the new games are going to be supporting it.
Maybe someone can throw in some info, but I thought Doom III was going to support multiprocessing.