Can't you run Minecraft on a toaster?
Can't you run Minecraft on a toaster?
The problem isn't Java per say but inefficient coding.Nope, and thanks for adding absolutely nothing to this thread.
Lowest hardware I have ever attempted MC on was an Atom N270 netbook and it was of course unplayable.
The problem, IMO, is the heavy use of Java and although you can run the 64 bit client, it still can be heavy on RAM usage, especially if using texture packs. As each new chunk is generated, it hits the CPU hard and can cause huge lag spikes while exploring.
For what you get on the screen, Minecraft is actually a very inefficient game. I have a laptop with an i7 3615 HD4000/GT630M and I have to get the nV chip involved to make the game really playable.
Nope, and thanks for adding absolutely nothing to this thread.
Lowest hardware I have ever attempted MC on was an Atom N270 netbook and it was of course unplayable.
The problem, IMO, is the heavy use of Java and although you can run the 64 bit client, it still can be heavy on RAM usage, especially if using texture packs. As each new chunk is generated, it hits the CPU hard and can cause huge lag spikes while exploring.
For what you get on the screen, Minecraft is actually a very inefficient game. I have a laptop with an i7 3615 HD4000/GT630M and I have to get the nV chip involved to make the game really playable.
Nope, and thanks for adding absolutely nothing to this thread.
Lowest hardware I have ever attempted MC on was an Atom N270 netbook and it was of course unplayable.
The problem, IMO, is the heavy use of Java and although you can run the 64 bit client, it still can be heavy on RAM usage, especially if using texture packs. As each new chunk is generated, it hits the CPU hard and can cause huge lag spikes while exploring.
For what you get on the screen, Minecraft is actually a very inefficient game. I have a laptop with an i7 3615 HD4000/GT630M and I have to get the nV chip involved to make the game really playable.