QX6700 and XP Home - Will it recognize all 4 cores?

Hulk

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Oct 9, 1999
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If I remember correctly I think as long as there is one physical processor socket XP Home will fully utilize whatever is sitting in it right?
 

Stumps

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Jun 18, 2001
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Umm I'm not sure, I wouldn't think so but then again I could be wrong, it might support multiple cores on a single CPU.
 

aigomorla

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My QX was booting up with all 4 cores reconized b4 the PSU blew. Dont worry unless your BOARD cant support a kentsfield it will pick it up in XP.
 

n7

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Jan 4, 2004
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Originally posted by: Hulk
If I remember correctly I think as long as there is one physical processor socket XP Home will fully utilize whatever is sitting in it right?

Correct.
 

Arkaign

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Oct 27, 2006
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As a matter of fact, I installed XP home on a dual slot1 P3 1ghz Compaq server, and it saw both cpus :) Was hell getting the raid going, but it worked out ok. Finally got my s2k3 license, so it's proper now.

As to Core2Quad, no prob w/Home
 

Roguestar

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XP Home runs on one or two processors, core it just treats as sub-units kind of like HT on the xeon or pentium 4s in task manager.
 

aigomorla

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Originally posted by: Roguestar
XP Home runs on one or two processors, core it just treats as sub-units kind of like HT on the xeon or pentium 4s in task manager.

actually i saw 4 logic cores on the windows task manager uner performance and cpu history. There was 4 boxes. CPU-Z reconized it as a kentsfield and coretemp showed temps on all 4 cores. :\

I cant tell you anymore more then that. Other then having prime95 run 4 times is a PITA because u need 4 different sub foldiers, and i think my orthos is messed up because its only picking up 2 out of the 4 cores, but it picks up both cores on my opty. Blah ... maybe something is wrong with the settings.

Anyhow i wish my QX was up so i could just take a SS for ya. Im still in debate on if i should go OP1000 from silverstone or PCnC 1Kw. There both great PSU's for quad core. Blah also i took the thing down because i reciently found out that an APOGEE will pwn a STORM rev.2 on a Quad core by almost 3-4C even with high flow :\
 

TheFamilyMan

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Mar 18, 2003
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Couldn't you just run a stress program and open up task manager and check for 4 logic boxes all with varying degrees of spiking activity? If you see activity in all 4 boxes then the OS is utilizing all 4 cores. If you only see two logic boxes then you know that XP home is limited to utilizng only two of the cores...

 

Roguestar

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Aug 29, 2006
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Originally posted by: aigomorla
Originally posted by: Roguestar
XP Home runs on one or two processors, core it just treats as sub-units kind of like HT on the xeon or pentium 4s in task manager.

actually i saw 4 logic cores on the windows task manager uner performance and cpu history. There was 4 boxes. CPU-Z reconized it as a kentsfield and coretemp showed temps on all 4 cores. :\

I meant two physically seperate processors. It'll have no problem addressing additional cores within each processor. I can't remember where it tops off but it is not limited to two cores, just two socketed processors.
 

Roguestar

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Yes, but they had just two cores and were hyperthreaded so appeared to do the same work as four cores (but actually weren't nearly as good).
 

BassBomb

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Originally posted by: Roguestar
Yes, but they had just two cores and were hyperthreaded so appeared to do the same work as four cores (but actually weren't nearly as good).

I wonder if quad core is hyperthreaded, wouldnt that allow 8 "cores"?
 

Roguestar

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I don't think they've used hyperthreading since the Pentium 4, so if it's not in this generation of the Core microarchitecture it'd be another while yet before we see it. Besides, I daresay there isn't /much/ need for that much threading going on in the /average/ person's PC (even the average gamer).
 

Aluvus

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Apr 27, 2006
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Originally posted by: BassBomb
Originally posted by: Roguestar
Yes, but they had just two cores and were hyperthreaded so appeared to do the same work as four cores (but actually weren't nearly as good).

I wonder if quad core is hyperthreaded, wouldnt that allow 8 "cores"?

Yes, it would produce 8 logical cores. Future quad-core Xeons may demonstrate this.

Originally posted by: Roguestar
I don't think they've used hyperthreading since the Pentium 4, so if it's not in this generation of the Core microarchitecture it'd be another while yet before we see it. Besides, I daresay there isn't /much/ need for that much threading going on in the /average/ person's PC (even the average gamer).

The Pentium Extreme Edition chips (which are based on the Pentium D) support Hyper-Threading. Nearly all modern (post-Foster) Xeons do, with the notable exceptions of Sossaman and Woodcrest.

I'm not aware of any current non-Netburst products that support Hyper-Threading, though.