WinXP 64bit
WinXP 64bit
Kupil som notebook s Athlon64 3000+ procesorom. Vie mi niekto vysvetlit, ake vyhody (ak vobec nejake) to bude mat s prichodom Win64 (najma co sa tyka audia).
Win64 sa chystaju niekedy na leto
Win64 sa chystaju niekedy na leto
Zkus ho pretaktovat, jestli to teda v notebooku jde. Ja mam A64 3000+ (Winchester na Socketu 939) taky a i bez zvysovani napeti jsem se dostal na stabilnich 2250 MHz, coz odpovida cca 3800+. Na desce s N-Force3 Ultra, ma to zvlast delicku pro procesor, FSB i RAMky, takze sbernice i RAM jede na normalni frekvenci:-)
bodyia píše:Zkus ho pretaktovat, jestli to teda v notebooku jde. Ja mam A64 3000+ (Winchester na Socketu 939) taky a i bez zvysovani napeti jsem se dostal na stabilnich 2250 MHz, coz odpovida cca 3800+. Na desce s N-Force3 Ultra, ma to zvlast delicku pro procesor, FSB i RAMky, takze sbernice i RAM jede na normalni frekvenci:-)
posli postup (mam tiez winchester a NForce4)
zaujimave citanie na temu 64bit a DAW http://www.cakewalk.com/x64/whitepaper.asp
"In our benchmarking of SONAR x64 Technology Preview, nearly all of the test files showed a performance gain when running at 64-bit. Our testing methodology was to start with a system using the same audio hardware and the same test files. The system was set up to dual boot under 32-bit Windows XP or 64-bit Windows XP. We would boot the system in 32-bit mode, load the 32-bit version of SONAR and plug-ins, and measure the performance of the test file. Then we would boot the system in 64-bit mode, load the 64-bit version of SONAR and plug-ins, and measure the performance again.
In this kind of testing, when there was a performance gain, it was in the 20%-30% range. Full disclosure: in a very small number of test cases 64-bit performed the same as 32-bit, but it was never worse. This kind of performance gain is huge. If you have a 3 GHz processor, a 30% performance boost makes it feel more like a 4 GHz processor. When was the last time you got a whole GHz for free? "
"In our benchmarking of SONAR x64 Technology Preview, nearly all of the test files showed a performance gain when running at 64-bit. Our testing methodology was to start with a system using the same audio hardware and the same test files. The system was set up to dual boot under 32-bit Windows XP or 64-bit Windows XP. We would boot the system in 32-bit mode, load the 32-bit version of SONAR and plug-ins, and measure the performance of the test file. Then we would boot the system in 64-bit mode, load the 64-bit version of SONAR and plug-ins, and measure the performance again.
In this kind of testing, when there was a performance gain, it was in the 20%-30% range. Full disclosure: in a very small number of test cases 64-bit performed the same as 32-bit, but it was never worse. This kind of performance gain is huge. If you have a 3 GHz processor, a 30% performance boost makes it feel more like a 4 GHz processor. When was the last time you got a whole GHz for free? "





