vote up 2 vote down star
1

I know that in most cases when you buy a Dual-Core CPU for the same price you could get a Quad-Core, you end up getting 2 cores that are faster individually than the 4 cores individually in the Quad-Core CPU.

Yes, you can essentially have 4 processes run simultaneously with a Quad-Core as compared to 2 with a Dual-Core, but because of the above mentioned difference you may find that the Dual-Core CPU performs better on your Desktop machine.

This is in theory of course.

Has anyone tested this? Also, what are everyone's thoughts on this topic?


Someone votes this to be on SuperUser.com. Normally I really would agree, excecpt this question pre-dates SuperUser.com by almost a full year, and it already has a few answers posted from almost a year ago too. – Chris Pietschmann Aug 5 at 13:15
@Chris: how does this change the fact that it belongs on SuperUser.com? – Joachim Sauer Aug 5 at 13:20
It seems we disagree a little bit, and I see you've voted it to be on SuperUser.com also. I wonder if all the answers get moved with it, if the question gets moved there? – Chris Pietschmann Aug 5 at 13:24
Remember that the SO trilogy is not just for getting your personal questions answered but also (and I'd even argue primarily) to get the answers to others who have the same question. And those others are more likely to find it if it's on the correct site. Of course the answers will be moved as well. Nothing will be lost. – Joachim Sauer Aug 5 at 13:31
Yes, the answers do get moved. See blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/07/…. – mmyers Aug 6 at 21:00

migrated to superuser.com by Jason, Joachim Sauer, John Saunders, mmyers, sth Aug 7 at 3:54

Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.