Depends what you need your computer for. If it is web browsing, office work, movies, music, light gaming etc, then save your money and go for a dual core, you won't get anything out of using a quad core.
If you are gaming, a tri or quad core, but again, tri would be the better option because no games see a massive advantage with the extra core, and you would be saving money.
If you are compiling programs, rendering, number crunching, making music, basically multi-threaded CPU intensive things, then a quad or hex core would be better.
I don't think a system should go by budget, but by means. It is all well and good saying "I have $2000 to spend on a system for browsing the web", but a $500 system would do that just as well with lesser components
If you were to buy a processor mainly for doing typical office work and no gaming, would you buy a dual or a quad?
I am looking to buy a new processor for my old rig and maybe give it to my dad who just does basic office stuff, he does not multi-task real heavy. Which would be better, a e8500 or a q6600? I will probably leave it at stock speeds.
If you were to buy a processor mainly for doing typical office work and no gaming, would you buy a dual or a quad?
I am looking to buy a new processor for my old rig and maybe give it to my dad who just does basic office stuff, he does not multi-task real heavy. Which would be better, a e8500 or a q6600? I will probably leave it at stock speeds.
An E8500 is going for about the same as a Q6600 these days. Around $100-110.
But because a Q6600 is two conroe 65nm core 2 duos on one die with 4mb cache each VS a wolfdale 45nm duo with 6mb L2. Wolfdale is faster clock for clock already, but the E8500 is clocked much higher too. It would be a noticeable gain going from a Q6600 to an E8500 for a single threaded apps PC.
An E8500 is going for about the same as a Q6600 these days. Around $100-110.
But because a Q6600 is two conroe 65nm core 2 duos on one die with 4mb cache each VS a wolfdale 45nm duo with 6mb L2. Wolfdale is faster clock for clock already, but the E8500 is clocked much higher too. It would be a noticeable gain going from a Q6600 to an E8500 for a single threaded apps PC.
Where are you seeing e8500's and q6600's for $110? Most places I looked are around $150 to 200. Unless you are talking about used ones, I am only looking at new ones. I forgot to mention I was looking at retail processors. Are those prices for oem processors?
Heck, most oem e8500 processors I looked at are higher than the retail version.