Where on earth have you got 984MHZ from?
Your Sempron 3200+ runs at 1.8 GHz (1800MHz)
If it's running slower than that, then you have your BIOS setup very wrong.
Bass76 said:and how does 80gb + 40gb = 100gb???
Most likely Cool 'n Quiet at work.
Your question is invalid...Hi,
Is it true that an AMD with 984 MHZ (like mine) is the equivalent to around a 1.5 GHZ Pentium? Is there really a difference in the frequence and power realtion in the two different brands?
Your question is invalid...
AMD is a company
Pentium is a model range from a company...
The comparison is between AMD and Intel...
If you want to use pentium in the example, you should be comparing something liek the AthlonXP series from AMD and the Pentium 4 series from intel, same era.
In short, this used to be true, AMD's performed better at lower frequencies because the clock cycles were shorter, hence more cycles could be completed in a shorter amount of time, for reference, one instruction can be carried out for every cycle a CPU runs through. The pentium range from intel had a god awful core design called "Netburst" it was marketed and expected to be really really good, but tbh it was a letdown, the way the core qorked, sacrificed on clock cycle length and went for higher frequencies instead. This wasnt a good choice, not only did it not prove to be any faster at all, the higehr frequency meant the pentiums ran a hell of a lot hotter than the Athlons from AMD.
Went a bit off topic there, woops, nevermiond, you get the idea.
Oh, to bring it a bit more up to date, intels latest architecture, called "Core" (and its variant "Core 2") are miles MILES better, notice the substantially lower clock speeds on the Core 2 Duo and the Core 2 Txxxx series in laptops...?? Yep, and now who is on top of the CPU market? Indeed, intel.
dragon2309
*EDIT* - oh and to answer your question, to get into your BIOS, hit DELETE or F1/F2 when your PC is booting up
Firstly, i hardly stressed myself "typing that all out" now did i?? no, secondly, it had everything to do with his original question, i quote:That had nothing to do with what he is asking. Im not sure why you insisted on typing all that.
So i'm not sure what thread you're reading, but i was adding insight to a question that as of yet no one has answered properly, all that has been raised is people asking where 984Mhz came from, well, if you READ that wasn't his original question at all.Is it true that an AMD with 984 MHZ (like mine) is the equivalent to around a 1.5 GHZ Pentium? Is there really a difference in the frequence and power realtion in the two different brands?
Firstly, i hardly stressed myself "typing that all out" now did i?? no, secondly, it had everything to do with his original question, i quote:
So i'm not sure what thread you're reading, but i was adding insight to a question that as of yet no one has answered properly, all that has been raised is people asking where 984Mhz came from, well, if you READ that wasn't his original question at all.
dragon2309
And you have a problem with that why? I have no quibbles in closing this thread if you insist on taking it off topic.You are truly something else....![]()
I have no quibbles in closing this thread if you insist on taking it off topic.
Would you really close my thread because someone is annoying you????![]()
Anyway, so how good is my Processor?
In short, this used to be true, AMD's performed better at lower frequencies because the clock cycles were shorter, hence more cycles could be completed in a shorter amount of time, for reference, one instruction can be carried out for every cycle a CPU runs through. The pentium range from intel had a god awful core design called "Netburst" it was marketed and expected to be really really good, but tbh it was a letdown, the way the core qorked, sacrificed on clock cycle length and went for higher frequencies instead. This wasnt a good choice, not only did it not prove to be any faster at all, the higehr frequency meant the pentiums ran a hell of a lot hotter than the Athlons from AMD.
dragon2309