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shieeet... my two primary computers are both single cores (one is an Athlon 64 3200+ - old school tech, but it still works well. the other is a Pentium M 2.13 Laptop only thing the desktop has that the laptop doesn't is multiple monitors - everything else the laptop is better at ). I do have a Core 2 Duo laptop here though, it's quite nice and the battery life is really phenominal.
"And yet, after spending 20+ years trying to evolve the user interface into something better, what's the most powerful improvement Apple was able to make? They finally put a god damned shell back in." -jwz
For more fun, at work we just got in a couple of IBM x3950 boxes. They have 8 sockets, filled with dual core, hyperthreaded Xeons. That's 16 physical and 32 virtual processors. The task manager is, shall we say, busy. They've also got 32GB of RAM. Big beastly SQL machines.
Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. Bastard coated bastards with bastard filling. But I don't find them half as annoying as I find naive, bubble-headed optimists who walk around vomiting sunshine. -- Dr. Perry Cox
My main desktop is a single single-core Athlon 1800.
My laptop is a single single-core P3 1GHz.
My newly upgraded experimentation machine is a single single-core A64-3500 (used to be an Athlon XP2200)
But of course I voted based on my development machine, which was recently upgraded to dual dual-core Opteron 275s. Holy crap did that make a difference. The speed increase (as measured by compiling EMC2 or Linux) was actually greater than the ratio of total core speed (4x2.2 GHz instead of 2x1.8) multiplied by the ratio of HT speed (1000 vs 800), even though every other component in the system was the same! (except the fans). Compilation of the entire Linux kernel and modules (using the .config from an updated Ubuntu 6.06 install) takes about 8 minutes.
Anyway - I'm curious to see the performance (and price ) of Doc's new machine.
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