- Feb 17, 2002
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I'm not really sure how to word what I'm trying to ask, but I'll do my best.
In the growing market of multi-core chips, speed has become a very relative term. One may argue that a 3.0 ghz dual core is faster than a 2.66 ghz quad core, or vice versa. They are each "faster" in their own regard. The quad core can definitely achieve more throughput, however the dual core could definitely run a single thread at a higher instruction rate.
So I'm in the market for a CPU that will execute single threaded software (not multi-threaded) at the fastest speed. This essentially makes the number of cores a moot point - so dual, tri, or quad core would not make a difference.
Here are the requirements:
1. Two (or more) cores. One core will be used for system ops and scheduling, the other core(s) will be dedicated to workload.
2. The CPU must be in the "consumer grade" market, so this eliminates the server class chips. I'm doing this for the sake of price.
If you'd like to share any other pertinent information, such as chipset or memory selection, please feel free. All input is greatly appreciated!
I'm looking into the possibility of building my own personal workstation. I do research in image analysis and computer vision, so it'd be nice to have my own gear.
EDIT: It's worth noting that I'm completely agnostic to brand names. AMD, Intel, or whatever is fine. I just require Linux and Windows support.
In the growing market of multi-core chips, speed has become a very relative term. One may argue that a 3.0 ghz dual core is faster than a 2.66 ghz quad core, or vice versa. They are each "faster" in their own regard. The quad core can definitely achieve more throughput, however the dual core could definitely run a single thread at a higher instruction rate.
So I'm in the market for a CPU that will execute single threaded software (not multi-threaded) at the fastest speed. This essentially makes the number of cores a moot point - so dual, tri, or quad core would not make a difference.
Here are the requirements:
1. Two (or more) cores. One core will be used for system ops and scheduling, the other core(s) will be dedicated to workload.
2. The CPU must be in the "consumer grade" market, so this eliminates the server class chips. I'm doing this for the sake of price.
If you'd like to share any other pertinent information, such as chipset or memory selection, please feel free. All input is greatly appreciated!
I'm looking into the possibility of building my own personal workstation. I do research in image analysis and computer vision, so it'd be nice to have my own gear.
EDIT: It's worth noting that I'm completely agnostic to brand names. AMD, Intel, or whatever is fine. I just require Linux and Windows support.