Multitasking CPU'S

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markstit

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Mar 9, 2009
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Does anyone know what CPU is better for multitasking?

Intel Core 2 Quad 2.4 GHz Processor
Or
Intel core 2 Duo 3 GHz Processor

I want an Intel processor under 200$. And does anyone know if there is a motherboard with two CPU slots to match the processors?
 

johnman

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Running more than one thing at once? A game and a antivirus scan? Then the quad 2.4, most games support multi core use.
If you want more speed then the dual. I have a 2.4 quad (Qu6600) and it multitasks fine. The tradeoff is that it has 2 more cores but at lower clockspeeds, make sense?
 

markstit

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InProgress said:
What is your main reason for choosing these CPUs. Gaming? Visual stuff?
Both, I just want to be able to run multiple tasks at once. Like playing a game and browsing the web
 

Gitsnik

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Any processor will do multiple tasks at once, it's called process management. The more CPU's the better, the more cores in a CPU the better (actually this can be not true depending on some of the other hardware but we'll go with it for a generic).

I regularly play Dawn of War or C&C or FEAR while surfing the web on the other screen - on a single core AMD 2.4.
 

KaZZaP

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I know shit all about computers but I heard my friends talking about it and one of them said not to buy a quad processor because there is some kind of 7 or 8 processor coming out.
 

7moreDead_v1legacy

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KaZZaP said:
I know shit all about computers but I heard my friends talking about it and one of them said not to buy a quad processor because there is some kind of 7 or 8 processor coming out.
Intels I 7 per-chance?

I've got a AMD 6000+ dc chip and my work mate is running some intel quad, his can handle a heap more than mine can without struggling...which he keeps bragging about -.-

Mobo wise...I know the Gigabyte G31M-ES2L is a pretty nifty board.
 

CosmicGrenade

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KaZZaP said:
I know shit all about computers but I heard my friends talking about it and one of them said not to buy a quad processor because there is some kind of 7 or 8 processor coming out.
and that will be many £££££

I myself have a Q6600 with GOStepping, Don't get the B2 one.
Great thing about the Q6600 you can overclock it to about 3.2GHz on the stock cooling fan some mad people have overclocked it to about 4.5GHz if i remember right

but I say just go for Q6600
 

sms_117b

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I've got my Q6600 overclocked to 3.4GHz, go for the quad, it's just better than the duo.
 

Danny Ocean

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Zeeky_Santos said:
KaZZaP said:
I know shit all about computers but I heard my friends talking about it and one of them said not to buy a quad processor because there is some kind of 7 or 8 processor coming out.
no number in computing isn't a deviant of the doubling rule. 1 is to 2 is to 4 is to 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024.

it is likely an 8 core he was referring to. either way quad core is considered to be the most hardcore thing on the market so far. because crazy and insanely expensive is what defines hardcore.
Or, more likely, Intel's i7 chip. However, that costs a fortune at the moment. Enough to warrant an upgrade to something lower for the time being.

Seriously, the cheapest socket 1366 motherboard is about £200! On top of that they need DDR3 RAM and more power.

On topic, though, go for the Q6600 with G0 stepping. It's the next thing I'm going to :D

Really, though the Athlon 64 X2 @ 3GHZ I have now is enough to play a game and surf the web at the same time. It's dual core. I think one of the above posts explained this well.
 

Xrysthos

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Various hardware forums report that the quads generally are very easy to overclock, even if you only use air cooling (fan-spam), so I guess this is a good choice, especially if you're into overclocking stuff.
 

Danny Ocean

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Zeeky_Santos said:
heh, my brother (the rich bastard) is getting a new computer with an i7, he is also planning on getting a new gtx 295's, and he wants to get two more after that. what a bastard, who needs 6 graphics cards?
No-one. He can't say he's professional either, they use Quadro cards.

God. He sounds loaded, can he send me his old rig, It's probably miles better than my current one :p
 

Horticulture

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Zeeky_Santos said:
heh, my brother (the rich bastard) is getting a new computer with an i7, he is also planning on getting a new gtx 295's, and he wants to get two more after that. what a bastard, who needs 6 graphics cards?
(o_O)

Make sure he knows that he can only use 2 at once...
 

Signa

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I did some pricing on the i7 a month ago, and came up with a pretty sweet rig for under a grand. I was going to buy it in May when my current PC turns 3 years old. I did just see Intel announce an i5 which is supposed to be 3 quad cores strapped together for release in October. I'm planning on waiting until then to get the i7 because I'm sure thats going to drive the price down.

Also there aren't a lot of i7 mobos out there right now. That drove the price up a bit

One word on AMDs: Cheap. And a few more words: My brother is a huge AMD fanboy and I can see why. The dollar-to-performance ratio is great on AMDs if you are gaming. All the benchmarks at Tomshardware.com shows the AMD performing superbly for its price. However, the AMDs were falling flat on their face when it came to pure number crunching. Whether it was video compression (xvid) or file compression (winrar), Intel was far, FAR superior. I do a lot of that stuff, so I'm going to stick with Intel for now.

I think AMD did release a new line of processors since I looked at those charts. Something might have changed.
 

cleverlymadeup

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most people don't have a big need for multicore cpu's. most programs aren't multithreaded and don't take advantage of the other cores or cpus in a chip/mb

get the one that's the best value
 

Horticulture

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Zeeky_Santos said:
a hoy hoy? why's that? i don't quite understand where this is going. he has a motherboard that can support all of this at once.
SLI boards can support 2 or 3 separate cards in SLI, but no more than 4 individual GPUs at the same time. Since the 295 is a dual-GPU card, it's possible to use two together (2 GTX295s with 2 GPUs per card=Quad-SLI), but using 3 (6 GPUs total) is more than the hardware and drivers can handle. 3-card SLI is only possible with one GPU per card (3x GTX285s, for instance). nVidia's naming system sucks so bad...