Your first comment,
Clocks don't mean anything as an athlon 64 at 2ghz can tie or beat a 3ghz pentium 4.
Comes quite out of the blue and while I do see where you are coming from, Cromwell is correct to point out that
Except this isn't a 2GHz Athlon 64 vs a 3GHz Pentium.
Because, according to your logic, one should purchase a Athlon700 over a Prescott 3.2GHz "because clocks dont matter"
how is the comparision non-applicable if the point was that clocks are meaningless.
Your to answer your question,
1. Consider my 'comparison' of the 13 year old
2. If you really wanna get semantic, what you said, expressed in basic logic was
isFaster(2GHzAMD64, 3GHzPentium4) => clockspeedNotImportant which by itself is logically fine (albeit technically unfounded as common sense would dictate) however you then attempt to draw a relation,
clockspeedNotImportant => isFaster(1.8GHzAthlonXPM, 2.8GhzCeleronM) which now written plainly out, is plain silly.
3. From a technical standpoint you are partially correct in your statement "clocks are meaningless" however only partially and its mostly incorrect:
(a) if clock speeds are meaningless there should not be a performance difference between a FX53 and a FX55 or between P4C-2.4 and P4C-3.4 and we know both such statements are flawed.
(b) if we do a cross-class and cross-platform comaprison (which is what you've tried to do), you are slightly correct in your implied (but not explicitly noted) point that
clock cycles do not make or break a processor however in that case, i'll point out that they
do matter -- otherwise they wouldnt bother listing the clock speeds
(c) if clock speeds didnt matter then there is no reason to reccomend the AMD chip over the Intel chip -- yes I do know of reasons -- for reccomending either way -- but note that you didnt provide anything other than a flawed implication
So indeed, Cromwell was correct in noting that
All you have done is shown that clock speed means nothing for desktops, as I said this is the laptop world, things are different