0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 4167 times.
I love the 2oz Gigabyte board, at least the feel and construction. I laughed at the box with the "Japanese Solid Capacitor" but I have nothing but good to say about this one so far. PC Wizard is amazingly useful and that it's free is fabulous.
Chances are, you don't need four cores versus two cores, if want you're doing is surfing the internet, balancing your checkbook, etc. You might be able to use four cores if you're using the machine as a HT processor, but even then, I have a dual core machine (Dell Zino) and it plays Blurays and the like perfectly fine. Now, if you're going to compress Blurays, then quad core should make the compression process faster. In short, if you're doing mathematically intensive applications, you might see an improvement in going to four cores over two cores. Other than that, the speed improvement probably isn't worth the cost.What I'm more interested in is low power processors. For instance, the Dell Zino I have is only 75 watts, running full bore, and that includes the graphics card. My old AMD machine's processor alone uses more power than that. When will we see more power saving processors and features (or are they out now)?
FWIW, I'm posting this from my newly "Sevened" PC. My current home rig is a decent but not outrageous machine made from (what used to be a) stout dual core AMD, with a 1.5T drive for storage and a 680G "C" drive. So are I'm loving it! I've used Windows 7 at school but this is my first time "living with it", and I wish I'd have done it sooner.Gonna build me an i5 eventually, though.
Good post, I'm sold on Windows 7 also...it's the best MS operating system ever (XP feels so old, and outdated now).
I have XP, Vista, Win7 running in the same house and recently upgraded one of my Vista machine to Win7. Threw in Ubuntu along the way as well.For all those who are saying Win7 are so much better than Vista or XP (especially XP), what EXACTLY is improved and how much? Sure, Win7 has less processes running than Vista and has nicer looking presentation than XP, etc, but for modern machines with good processors, I really haven't noticed such large differences in speed or performance.
It definitely depends on what you're using the machine for. If you're surfing the 'Net and balancing your checkbook, you don't really need that fast of a machine for that. On the other hand, I was ripping a DVD on my Dell Zino (new, cute computer with all upgrades, including 4GB of RAM) and then ripped the same thing on my home-built AMD machine (several years old, dual core, 6GB RAM, both machines have win 7) and the old AMD took about 1/3 the time to rip the same DVD. But, the time isn't critical, because I usually start the process and leave.