Neither is more efficient, one is explicity specifying the namespace, the other is implicitly.
At the top of your .cs file, the using directives import namespaces, meaning that types in those namespaces don't need the fully qualified path to be recognised in the code
e.g.
List<T>
appears in System.Collections.Generic
... without the using directive for this namespace you must use the fully qualified name:
System.Collections.Generic.List<int> someList;
Whereas with it, you don't
using System.Collections.Generic;
List<int> someList;
Sometimes there can be namespace collisions - imagine the following scenario:
Some.Namespace.Task
Some.Othernamespace.Task
If you import both namespaces:
using Some.Namespace;
using Some.Othernamespace;
Task someTask; // <--- this line will cause a compile time error
The compiler doesn't know which Task
you want, the one from Some.Namespace or the one from Some.Othernamespace - in this case you need to be specific and supply the full namespace (or use an alias)
Hope this helps
Read all about namespaces here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-gb/library/z2kcy19k(v=vs.80).aspx