Hey, Everyone. Just signed up, and this is my first post to Anandtech.com.
I'm planning on upgrading my motherboard & CPU and am trying to decide whether or not to get a P4 with hyper-threading or without it. The only apps I will be running on this particular computer will be Microsoft Office (mostly Word and PowerPoint) and the Adobe Creative Suite (mostly InDesign and Photoshop). I won't be using the Internet or e-mail on this computer. Other than Photoshop CS, I don't see any of these apps making notable use of hyper-threading. Further, I have no intentions of doing any other multi-tasking while these programs are running (at least not often enough to matter).
So as for Photoshop: According to Intel's Web site, they worked with Adobe to optimize Photoshop CS for P4 chips with hyper-threading. In particular, I think they say there are about 20 or so filters specifically architected to utilize the dual-threading capabilities of the P4 with HT. Sounds great.
My question is this: I've read that some software apps actually take a hit (run slower) when run on a P4 with hyper-threading. When I called Intel and asked which ones, I couldn't get a straight answer (or any answer, actually!). Rather than spend hours scouring the Web for some lab's benchmark results on this, I thought I'd ask if any of you know which software programs out there in computerland actually take a hit with a hyper-threading-enabled P4. (And if there's a reasonably recent [and truly reliable] test any of you can point me towards, that's available online, that'd be great.)
Several test reports and commentaries I've read on hyper-threading mention things like, "some applications run 5-10% slower with hyper-threading enabled, so whether or not HT is for you depends on the applications you'll be running." Well, okay, that's great to know, but that type of statement is useless unless we know WHICH apps take a hit, right?!
I'm basically trying to determine whether or not I'll take a slight performance hit with my MS Office apps, InDesign, Illustrator and Acrobat in exchange for some genuine speed improvement with specific filters in Photoshop CS if I get a P4 with HT.
Ken
PS: I'm also curious about whether the particular optimized filters in Photoshop CS are ones that a typical Photoshop user uses a lot, so if any of you have an opinion on that, feel free to share it with the class as well.
I'm planning on upgrading my motherboard & CPU and am trying to decide whether or not to get a P4 with hyper-threading or without it. The only apps I will be running on this particular computer will be Microsoft Office (mostly Word and PowerPoint) and the Adobe Creative Suite (mostly InDesign and Photoshop). I won't be using the Internet or e-mail on this computer. Other than Photoshop CS, I don't see any of these apps making notable use of hyper-threading. Further, I have no intentions of doing any other multi-tasking while these programs are running (at least not often enough to matter).
So as for Photoshop: According to Intel's Web site, they worked with Adobe to optimize Photoshop CS for P4 chips with hyper-threading. In particular, I think they say there are about 20 or so filters specifically architected to utilize the dual-threading capabilities of the P4 with HT. Sounds great.
My question is this: I've read that some software apps actually take a hit (run slower) when run on a P4 with hyper-threading. When I called Intel and asked which ones, I couldn't get a straight answer (or any answer, actually!). Rather than spend hours scouring the Web for some lab's benchmark results on this, I thought I'd ask if any of you know which software programs out there in computerland actually take a hit with a hyper-threading-enabled P4. (And if there's a reasonably recent [and truly reliable] test any of you can point me towards, that's available online, that'd be great.)
Several test reports and commentaries I've read on hyper-threading mention things like, "some applications run 5-10% slower with hyper-threading enabled, so whether or not HT is for you depends on the applications you'll be running." Well, okay, that's great to know, but that type of statement is useless unless we know WHICH apps take a hit, right?!
I'm basically trying to determine whether or not I'll take a slight performance hit with my MS Office apps, InDesign, Illustrator and Acrobat in exchange for some genuine speed improvement with specific filters in Photoshop CS if I get a P4 with HT.
Ken
PS: I'm also curious about whether the particular optimized filters in Photoshop CS are ones that a typical Photoshop user uses a lot, so if any of you have an opinion on that, feel free to share it with the class as well.