I always say that once you go dual core you will NEVER want to go back to single core. The extra MHz here and there will never make up for the functionality and flexibility of dual cores.
As stated before with the recent price cuts of most of AMD X2 dual cores and the decent prices of core2 etc, it simply makes sense to go dual core especially when most likely if you are already running a 939 chipset mobo or any decent Intel chipset you are already set up to just slap a dual core and have at it.
I can think of one person I know who would never notice the benefits of dual core ? my dad. He simply checks him email, and when he uses Word, that?s all he does. He does not know how to burn a CD/DVD, does not play games and essentially when he does one thing on hic computer, that?s all he does. He devotes all his efforts and attention to that one application. He will never need dual core.
In my case at any given time I have 4 or 5 apps going ? I might be downloading, joining a massive archive, listening to mp3s, checking my email, and have 3 or 4 webages open on the go comparing prices, reading reviews etc. Then I could be playing a game online while having a crap load of stuff still running, checking maps online, still listening to music and possibly burning a DVD all the same time. I could never do this on my previous CPU ? when I would alt-tab or minimize say a game everything would just crawl. Try using a program that rebuilds a damaged file (like .par2 etc) and at the same time surf, check email and play MP3s on a single core. It feels like it?s just going to implode.
Anyhow there?s my pitch
