Quote from gnome:
Well, I've had some BSOD's if that's what you mean. But I've never had any kind of freeze, lockup, or delay (except when eSignal was having problems, of course... and then many subscribers had it) while my trading setup was running. Not even from Java.
My first computer... I guess it was on DOS. I didn't even have a floppy drive.. it ran on a tape drive like a cassette player..My first trading rig ran on DOS 3.1, if I recall.
Yeah, $254 for my trading machine is a bit ridiculous.
My MAIN rig (data, charts, 4-monitors, TV tuner, etc.)... that's different. It was $569.
Quote from gnome:
In dual and quad core systems, I doubt more than one core is used all that much... unless you're running 2 cpu-intensive apps at the same time.
Perhaps if one app has a higher priority it will get one core to itself and everything else will access another core...??
Quote from GermanTrader:
gnome, I still have my first computer, a Commodore 64 with printer, 1200 baud modem, monitor, cassette data drive and 5.25" floppy! I even have one of the first Flight Simulator versions available for it. The screen updates every minute in flight, and there were lots of wrecks! For k=1 to 1000, next, end! Learned basic, bulletin boards and sprites on it in 1982. Moved on to a Trash 80, then a 286 and Macintosh 512. Amazingly, it still works! I've been offered a grand for all of it, but no, I will keep it.
Quote from Bernard111:
Higher priority of a process does not mean that specific process is going to be managed by a specific core... affinity is different than priority; that's why I'm asking: why choose a dual-core CPU if with a quad-core you can distribute the allocations of the programs processess 'better' when the software is not multi-thread, etc?It's a question, clearly for the experts, here.

Quote from mgookin:
What's the most money any of you paid for some of those older systems?
I remember a sign contractor telling me he paid $35,000 USD for a computer with a 50 processor (at the time I was buying the latest greatest PIII-550 and he said his was a "50")