When buying a CPU, Which is best? A CPU with more cores say a quad core or hexa core? OR A fast CPU that runs at say 4ghz or so?
I'd take the extra cores any day, because you can overclock it to the same speeds, and also because a quad core @2GHz, will almost always win out against a dual @ 3+GHz (unless it is say an athlon x4 (not athlon II) vs i3)
The Intel i7's are better clock for clock, but are more expensive.from there any preference between AMD and Intel?
from there any preference between AMD and Intel?
[-0MEGA-];1476498 said:The Intel i7's are better clock for clock, but are more expensive.
how about a 4ghz dual core intel i5 vs a 2.1ghz quad phenom?
wouldn't the i5 be faster on non multitasking?
and the phenom be faster with multitasking?
or would i5's Hyper Threading even it out?
how about a 4ghz dual core intel i5 vs a 2.1ghz quad phenom?
wouldn't the i5 be faster on non multitasking?
and the phenom be faster with multitasking?
or would i5's Hyper Threading even it out?
how about a 4ghz dual core intel i5 vs a 2.1ghz quad phenom?
For single threaded applications, the higher the speed the better it will perform. (This is throwing out that from what I have seen Intel is a bit better at floating point and other integer computations.)
for multitasking, I would chose the quad core phenom. If the tasks can be spread out over all four cores then IMO, it should be a bit faster. As for as I understand hyper threading, I can't seem to find the source but I heard that it only gives you about a 30% increase over your original dual core performance. Since you have 2 physical cores and 2 virtual cores, it should be slower than 4 physical cores.
I think that you might not see much of a difference unless you are really pushing your processor.
There's a lot more to CPU performance besides clock speed and number of cores.When buying a CPU, Which is best? A CPU with more cores say a quad core or hexa core? OR A fast CPU that runs at say 4ghz or so?
Where could I find a comparaison chart between AMD and Intel processors?
nah larkin, some i5s are dual.. just have higher speeds...
I think all i7s are 4 or 6
clock speed is not the end all be all feature of a CPU, and there is a good reason why Intel and AMD really don't go far beyond the 3Ghz realm for their CPUs. Instead they add more features, more on die cache, more cores, more instruction sets, etc.
You sure? isn't the 965 stock clocked at 3.4ghz? I believe AMD and Intel keep most of their chips around 2.4-2.8ghz as well.
Hopefully bulldozer fixes the other things. It should seeing as it requires a new socket.