All analysis that I read online regarding hyperthreading seems to revolve around specific tasks; whether it's gaming or encoding, and how those tasks manage multithreading. But there is never discussion about actual system performance when you run A LOT of parallel threads.
Further, HT discussions seem to focus on a desktop user, and conclusions always seem to be that most will not notice a difference between an overclocked i5 with 4 cores versus an i7 that has 4 additional HT virtual cores enabled.
But what about people that have an ultrabook with a dual core processor. Does a dual core ULV i7 provide material advantages with HT enabled? Versus not?
More specifically, will HT provide tangible improvements with the following workload (by improvements I simply mean a smoother/non-interrupted user experience):
If I have Google Chrome open with 20 tabs, Opera Browser open & running IRC client, BitTorrent, VPN & Antivirus, MS Outlook, Microsoft Word, Excel (And by excel I mean really extensive financial models with thousands of calculations and sensitivity analysis), Tweetdeck, and possibly a video running in VLC.
Further, HT discussions seem to focus on a desktop user, and conclusions always seem to be that most will not notice a difference between an overclocked i5 with 4 cores versus an i7 that has 4 additional HT virtual cores enabled.
But what about people that have an ultrabook with a dual core processor. Does a dual core ULV i7 provide material advantages with HT enabled? Versus not?
More specifically, will HT provide tangible improvements with the following workload (by improvements I simply mean a smoother/non-interrupted user experience):
If I have Google Chrome open with 20 tabs, Opera Browser open & running IRC client, BitTorrent, VPN & Antivirus, MS Outlook, Microsoft Word, Excel (And by excel I mean really extensive financial models with thousands of calculations and sensitivity analysis), Tweetdeck, and possibly a video running in VLC.