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8 answers

No, you are running at 2.6 GHz. You will only run programs faster if they are multithreaded and make full use of both cores. Otherwise, the best way to optimize your system is to seperate different processes onto the two different cores.

2006-10-23 10:06:00 · answer #1 · answered by taskr36 4 · 1 0

No, you just have two processors running at 2.6 Ghz. You can say that it's around 1.5 times faster than just having one processor.

2006-10-23 10:07:21 · answer #2 · answered by the redcuber 6 · 0 0

no, it means that you're running the equivalent of two processors, each running at 2.6 GHz. It's like having two processors, not double the power. It makes for eaiser/faster multi-tasking.

2006-10-23 10:02:25 · answer #3 · answered by gatesfam@swbell.net 4 · 0 0

No, You are not running at 5.2. This is a commen mistake. You simply have two "cores" runnong on one unit that both have a processing frequency of 2.6ghz. Mutible cores are great multitaskers :P

2006-10-23 10:06:15 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

nope! ur still running 2.6 Ghz. but it has to processors. take note: ur processor will do double processing only if only ur processor1 is busy running something. this processor2 is just like somewhat a reserve only...

2006-10-23 10:28:38 · answer #5 · answered by knapp 2 · 0 0

You wish!!

A 5+ GHz processor hasn't been produced yet.

Everybody is right. 2.6GHz is what your CPU's clock speed is.

2006-10-23 10:23:13 · answer #6 · answered by Dick 7 · 0 0

Nope, your running at 2.6, but you can run two processes at 2.6 each.

2006-10-23 10:01:25 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

yea o

2006-10-23 10:01:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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