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Looking at a new mackbook and i was wondering if there's really a difference between 2Ghz and 2.16Ghz. I plan to run bootcamp so i can use windows on it and i run a windows based recording software. Bassically do i really need the 2.16Ghz?

2007-06-19 20:48:26 · 7 answers · asked by hey its me 3 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

7 answers

This is actually a very very simple question to answer. When comparing processors of different types, comparing Ghz is almost pointless. But when comparing two processors of the same type, where Ghz is the only difference it is very simple. If it is .16Ghz faster than a 2Ghz, then you just look at that as a percentage. .16 is 8% of 2, so in fact the 2.16Ghz processors will be roughly 8% faster than the 2Ghz processor. I know that sounds overly simple, but I have checked that against benchmarks, and it holds up. Keep in mind, this is ONLY when everything else about the processer is the same.

2007-06-20 09:48:00 · answer #1 · answered by mysticman44 7 · 0 0

GHz truly has very little to do with a processor's power. It's more about how many bits (32 or 64, both of those are 64), whether it has multiple cores, the cache. There is way too much emphasis on the GHz by computer companies.

I don't know the details, but I'm pretty sure you wouldn't be able to tell a big difference between the machines. Either way I know you'll be happy.

Very good choice by the way, the Mac Book is a great machine! :)

2007-06-19 20:55:39 · answer #2 · answered by luminousnerd 2 · 0 0

Well, when buying a laptop it is always good to get something faster now rather than later as it is more difficult to upgrade those. The difference in the models you are looking at are not just processor speeds though, the next step up also has a DVD burner and a larger hard drive.

Ram would be the easiest component to upgrade, followed by hard drives as these tend to more easily accessible.

2007-06-19 21:00:33 · answer #3 · answered by apocolypse734 2 · 0 0

Okay, let me answer it like this: Back in the day chips were measured in Mhz and going from a 450 Mhz to a 500 Mhz was a big deal.

In those terms you are talking about 2,000 Mhz -vs- 2,160 Mhz. I still run my G4 iBook and it still runs great. You will likely have this unit for some time.

Think hard, look at the facts and choose wisely.

2007-06-19 21:00:16 · answer #4 · answered by mbu 1 · 0 0

You laptop utilization does not require a precise end laptop. one element you probably did no longer point out is your point of laptop understanding. Given the desires you have expressed, and putting in ideas ease of use, i might propose an Apple MacBook or MacBook professional finding on your budget. i'm specific you additionally can get an older Mac at a sensible cost. the convenience of use and setup make it commendable for a pupil. And the styling quite is constructive. although i could desire to alert you, some video games have basically laptop variations, and if this is an overriding ingredient then decide for a Pentium sequence laptop. regardless of you do decide for, upload RAM. maximum manufacturers put in inadequate RAM. i might recomend you have a minimum of IGB or RAM.

2016-11-07 00:16:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In THIS case, not really. You're only talking about ~160MHz, and at that level, it's not really that big of a difference. If you're looking at a new computer at this point, it's more important to pay attention to how many cores the processors have. Keep in mind that Leopard (Mac's next OS) is going to utilize multi-core processors in ways that windows can only dream of.

Unless we're talking about differences of ~500MHz or more though... you're not really going to see THAT much.

2007-06-19 21:15:22 · answer #6 · answered by jester4kicks 2 · 0 0

It will be a little little faster, but No.
But the real difference is seen, when you compare a 2GHz to a 3GHz.

2007-06-19 20:51:22 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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