well I can say that upgrading the cpu does make noticable diff I went from a 3500+ to a 3800+ same chipset as you and all and it does go faster, depends on what you're doing if you're running huge programs that suck up ram then its always good to have two gigs...but if you just want over all speed...I would go with the cpu...to be honest with you I would do the CPU get it before the discontinue it for newer chipsets
2007-01-26 11:57:02
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answer #1
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answered by Fredrick D 1
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I went from 1 to 2 gigs of ram hardly noticed the difference. I have Athlon 64 3000+ 2ghz. You could overclock it but probably loose stability. Do you really need speed ?. I assume you run the usual clean up tools and defrag.
2007-01-26 11:51:59
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The immediate bang for the buck will be in upgrading the memory to 2 Gigs. Windows is huge on memory and i got a good boost when i went from 1 to 2 Gigs.
2007-01-26 11:48:48
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answer #3
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answered by shravan_sundaram 2
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If you run multiple applications, then both ways will make a difference. The actual parameter here is speed. With such, then increasing the processor speed will make the "thinking" of the computer faster. Installing more RAM will help with multitasking issues that may slow down your system. Good luck.
2007-01-26 11:50:27
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answer #4
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answered by Unforgiven Shadow 4
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Very simple: (without over-clocking)
Get a High-End gaming PC Magazine and browse for similar Processor speed and memory. The difference mostly:
- a faster primary drives such as 10,000 rpm Raptor (SATA)
-->to access and save data faster.
- a video card upgrade such a decent PCI-x cards.
--->to display data faster.
Your system maybe fast but your peripherals do not respond fast thereby wasting the CPU clock cycle.
If you have a name brand PC with no SATA or PCI-x..
--->get a new motherboard with SATA and a PCI-x and transfer the guts.
But you might encounter with your licensed OS such as XP since it may not BOOT-up and No big time dealer today such as DELL gives their customers the "system installation CDs".
2007-01-26 19:32:08
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answer #5
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answered by 64bit upgrader 2
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Depends how you use your computer - if you have lots of applications running at once and memory intensive ones such as MS Word and MS Access then upgrade the RAM.
If you have fast moving software such as games that are graphics intensive then upgrade the CPU.
2007-01-26 11:48:35
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answer #6
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answered by Trevor 7
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interior the U. S. (and probable different places) a 56k modem connection is constrained to 48k archives flow speed (with the aid of fact any swifter and it might reason interference with different telephone strains - dial-up is a voice-grade sign, no longer a DSL sign). a pc working 750 MHz with 128MB of RAM - and domicile windows ninety 8 or before - will artwork purely great. domicile windows XP won't run nicely on that computing gadget, inspite of the shown fact that. (Or on any computing gadget working under 1GB of RAM - 2GB will enable it run much extra appropriate.)
2016-11-01 09:19:27
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answer #7
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answered by herrick 4
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That totally depends on how much and what type of software you are running! What on your PC is slow? Internet? Programs? You want answers provide explicit details!
2007-01-26 11:48:16
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i don't know that mcuh about computer, but because 2 is just one higher than 1 i would think not. try closing application after using them instead of keeping them open and check for viruses. check you boot sector, my comp was running slow just last week and when i checked my c drive was infected.
2007-01-26 18:26:30
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answer #9
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answered by windbag 2
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Buy and install Registry Mechanic and run it often.
My computer picks up every time I do it.
Also defrag quite often
2007-01-26 17:02:58
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answer #10
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answered by swenson0 5
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