Agustus_61
New Member
Was just chatting with a co-worker about this and I really didn't know the answer so thought I'd drop a note here.
When building strictly a gaming PC - no apps used like Photoshop, Excel, etc., would it make more sense to use a P4 than a Core 2 Duo processor? Do games make use of Core 2 Duo processors? The highest Core 2 Duo processors are rated at 2.66Mhz for each core. Whereas there are P4 processors that are rated at 3.8Mhz.
If games don't make use of the Core 2 Duo technology, then it would seem to me that the P4 3.8 would make more sense (and at considerable savings too). Is this the case?
Thanks in advance for your responses.
When building strictly a gaming PC - no apps used like Photoshop, Excel, etc., would it make more sense to use a P4 than a Core 2 Duo processor? Do games make use of Core 2 Duo processors? The highest Core 2 Duo processors are rated at 2.66Mhz for each core. Whereas there are P4 processors that are rated at 3.8Mhz.
If games don't make use of the Core 2 Duo technology, then it would seem to me that the P4 3.8 would make more sense (and at considerable savings too). Is this the case?
Thanks in advance for your responses.