"woody" <> wrote in message
news:qxnPa.26620$ t...
> Not so, I saw a demo where Intel was doing a backup using the MS version
> from years ago
That's a little obscure, reckon they searched high and low for anything that
might just work well with HT.
> , and with the HT enabled it killed that backup in no time,
> whereas with the same system and it turned off it took forever.
Doesn't say a lot about a standard P4.
> I doubt
> that old backup deal from Win 95 was an HT program. They also demoed some
> high graphics picture processing from digital camera in Adobe photo and it
> processed and opened 50 pics in 24 seconds enabled, disabled took the
normal
> 7-8 minutes.
Very obviously an enhanced HT version, but impressive all the same.
> Of course this was in the Intel road show that I attended, and anything is
> possible when Intel is putting on the demo.
Well, exactly.
> But with all the reviews of the
> HT I don't think you can go wrong today by using it.
Well, I haven't seen many reviews, but maybe if you swapped 'today' for
'tomorrow'
> And the 2.4GHZ version
> is supposed to be very overclockable. At around $200 for a 2.4GHZ 800FSB
> this might not be a bad deal.
You could buy 2 good XP2400 chips for that. And like I said, my overclocked
XP2100 system compares favourably to a 2-and-a-half-gig P4. Unless Intel
are doing the benchmarking and you're using Win95.....
>
> "Li'l ol' me" <richie42@***SPAMOFF**eidosnet.co.uk> wrote in message
> news:beksgk$bt5$...
> > I was under the impression that applications had to be specially written
> for
> > HT for any speed increase.
> >
> > "woody" <> wrote in message
> > news:fumPa.26428$ et...
> > > Quad pumped CPU's are not all that, what is cool about some of them is
> the
> > > HT technology, that is what peaks my interest with them. With HT
> enabled
> > > those processors can crunch through anything in a quarter of the time
> than
> > > without it enabled.
> > >
> > >
> > > "Wblane" <> wrote in message
> > > news:...
> > > > That's amazing (212 FSB). I'm not really interested in buying a new
> CPU
> > > until I
> > > > can get double the clock speed of what I've got. Up until late 2000,
I
> > was
> > > > running a K63+ at 600Mhz. This system is just a stopgap until I can
> get
> > > some
> > > > sort of Intel
> > > > Pentium IV based system. Does anyone know if the quad-pumped FSB's
of
> > the
> > > newer
> > > > Pentium IV systems really make a huge difference?
> > > >
> > > > >But my XP2100 (meant for 133FSB) is currently running stable at
> 212FSB,
> > > and
> > > > >I haven't even bothered to REALLY push it. And because the abits
> allow
> > > you
> > > > >to change the CPU multiplier on unlocked chips (well MINE'S locked
I
> > > think)
> > > > >I can put the FSB to silly figures without overclocking the CPU at
> all
> > > (ie
> > > > >by reducing the CPU multiplier).
> > > > >
> > > > >I work in pounds rather than dollars, but what you mentioned is the
> > going
> > > > >rate for a top of the range board (you could spend more and get no
> > more).
> > > > >And I URGE you to chuck that tbird and buy an XP! You can buy an
> > XP2400
> > > for
> > > > >under 60 pounds in the UK (probably way under 90 dollars for you
> > without
> > > > >tax)
> > > > >
> > > > >It's no wonder you don't think much of the board when you're
> > constraining
> > > it
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > -Bill (remove "botizer" to reply via email)
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>
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