heretolearn
Junior Member
Hi, this is a theoretical Q?, that will help settle some debate (from my side) I hope..
Looking at the P3 + P4 series of chips,( brands and versions not mentioned) in general, do you feel that there is a greater performance in the, eg P4 #.## and it's cheaper Celeron version of the same speed, like wise again with the Athlon and the Duron,?
I know that back in the old days of the 386 and 486 and even the P90s and P120 the difference was not noticable. Also, the architecture of the Chip and it's design will greatly enhance the performance of a CPU.
I have been told that, even with todays P4s, that there is no advantage between, a 2.4ghz and a 2.8ghz for example. My question is not about Brand names, but just the theory side of it, the example above tells me that there is a 400mhz difference, and I know that this relates to for eg, a 10mhz chip and 400mhz chip, very noticable.
Further, are high end games a real good test for a system, with regards to the CPU that is, lets not involve the on board RAM and the Video Card at this time?
thanks
Looking at the P3 + P4 series of chips,( brands and versions not mentioned) in general, do you feel that there is a greater performance in the, eg P4 #.## and it's cheaper Celeron version of the same speed, like wise again with the Athlon and the Duron,?
I know that back in the old days of the 386 and 486 and even the P90s and P120 the difference was not noticable. Also, the architecture of the Chip and it's design will greatly enhance the performance of a CPU.
I have been told that, even with todays P4s, that there is no advantage between, a 2.4ghz and a 2.8ghz for example. My question is not about Brand names, but just the theory side of it, the example above tells me that there is a 400mhz difference, and I know that this relates to for eg, a 10mhz chip and 400mhz chip, very noticable.
Further, are high end games a real good test for a system, with regards to the CPU that is, lets not involve the on board RAM and the Video Card at this time?
thanks