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Owww!- Mark
Core 2 Duo E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - Asus P5B Deluxe - 2048MB Corsair Twinx 6400C4 - ATI AIW X1900 - Seagate 7200.10 SATA 320GB primary - Western Digital SE16 SATA 320GB secondary - Samsung SATA Lightscribe DVD/CDRW- Midiland 4100 Speakers - Presonus Firepod - Dell FP2001 20" LCD - Windows XP Home
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Unless added by a recent service pak XP home does not support mutiple processors. I think he meant to say XP Pro or Windows 2000.
I'm not intrested in it if it requires XP.
Too bad they didn't do mpeg2 encoding benchmarks as thats the only thing I do that will motivate me to go thru the hassle of another upgrade right now.
--wally.
--wally.
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Nevermind that! Didja see the ad on page 4? Links to here:
SWEET!
Kevin
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Originally posted by wkulecz
Unless added by a recent service pak XP home does not support mutiple processors. I think he meant to say XP Pro or Windows 2000.
I'm not intrested in it if it requires XP.
Too bad they didn't do mpeg2 encoding benchmarks as thats the only thing I do that will motivate me to go thru the hassle of another upgrade right now.
--wally.
--wally.-Slougi
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"XP home does support hyperthreading.
________________
-Slougi "
Reference please.
XP home does not support multiprocessing (SMP) so how does it support HT?
Its possible its added by a service pak, but I don't recall seeing this mentioned, not that MS doesn't continue to sneak things in :-(
--wally.
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XP Home does support Hyperthreading.
From the anandtech.com review of the P4 3.06Ghz:
Operating System support for Hyper-Threading is necessary but it currently exists in two different forms. Windows 2000 Professional supports multiple processors but it does not properly support Hyper-Threading. This means that it will see a single HT enabled Pentium 4 as two CPUs, but the OS will think that it is running on two physical CPUs instead of one physical CPU split into two logical CPUs. Why is this a problem?
With a single Pentium 4 processor this isn't much of an issue, but things get much more complicated with multiprocessor Xeons with HT enabled under Windows 2000 Professional or Server. Windows 2000 Professional only supports a maximum of two processors, and 2000 Server supports a max of 4 processors. With two HT enabled CPUs under Windows 2000 Professional, enabling HT will not make a difference as the OS will only work with a maximum of two CPUs. Similarly, a quad HT system under Windows 2000 Server would appear to the OS as an 8 processor system and thus exceed its licensing limitations giving you the use of only 4 of the CPUs.
Luckily Windows XP was designed with Hyper-Threading support in mind and thus even Home Edition will support a single CPU with HT enabled. Keep in mind that Windows XP Home does not support multiple physical processors, but if you enable HT on a Pentium 4 XP Home will recognize it as two CPUs.
The same situation exists with Windows XP Professional where the OS supports a maximum of two physical processors but it will allow a configuration with 4 logical processors.
Last edited by Hulk; 16 November 2002, 22:42.- Mark
Core 2 Duo E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - Asus P5B Deluxe - 2048MB Corsair Twinx 6400C4 - ATI AIW X1900 - Seagate 7200.10 SATA 320GB primary - Western Digital SE16 SATA 320GB secondary - Samsung SATA Lightscribe DVD/CDRW- Midiland 4100 Speakers - Presonus Firepod - Dell FP2001 20" LCD - Windows XP Home
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I wish I could get my hands on a 3.06 P4 so I could run the MS Pro benchmark. There's just no way I'm paying $600 for it! Especially after spending nearly $500 on DVD Workshop and Sound Forge 6.0 last week. My wife is forgiving, but not that forgiving.- Mark
Core 2 Duo E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - Asus P5B Deluxe - 2048MB Corsair Twinx 6400C4 - ATI AIW X1900 - Seagate 7200.10 SATA 320GB primary - Western Digital SE16 SATA 320GB secondary - Samsung SATA Lightscribe DVD/CDRW- Midiland 4100 Speakers - Presonus Firepod - Dell FP2001 20" LCD - Windows XP Home
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