1+1=2 is the marketing scheme
2 is always better than 1 right?
that's why intel has "duo" & "solo"
from what i've heard, there are 2 versions of the duo core, one has based on prescott, and the other is based on the pentium m.
2 is always better than 1 right?
that's why intel has "duo" & "solo"
from what i've heard, there are 2 versions of the duo core, one has based on prescott, and the other is based on the pentium m.
Quote from nononsense:
The only good answer to all this is benchmarking. I have not done this for the dualcore chips, but from intensive testing of dual processors under non-server loads, it's quite frustrating to see that total processor load almost never exceeds 50%. In my experience, the OS and driver processes you are alluding to indeed run on the other processor but constitute typically only a fraction of your application loads.
I simply never came across a competent explanation as to why a dual core should be better in all this. This is simply marketeering, now that chip manufacturers ran into the wall of physical limitations. They absolutely want the ignorant to think that indeed 1 + 1 = 2.