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how much does processor speed matter?
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<blockquote data-quote="SomeGuyDude" data-source="post: 6285324" data-attributes="member: 613531"><p>Proc speed becomes mostly irrelevant for 90% of users. When the processor comes into play is when the computer has to do a lot of hard calculations, such as video rendering, audio compressing, playing games, that sort of thing. A faster process doesn't make the computer faster, it makes it able to calculate faster.</p><p></p><p>What will cause a speed boost is more memory and faster read/write time on the hard drive. The latter will make your computer faster at opening applications, moving/copying files and the like, the latter will keep it nice and snappy when you have things already open and loaded up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SomeGuyDude, post: 6285324, member: 613531"] Proc speed becomes mostly irrelevant for 90% of users. When the processor comes into play is when the computer has to do a lot of hard calculations, such as video rendering, audio compressing, playing games, that sort of thing. A faster process doesn't make the computer faster, it makes it able to calculate faster. What will cause a speed boost is more memory and faster read/write time on the hard drive. The latter will make your computer faster at opening applications, moving/copying files and the like, the latter will keep it nice and snappy when you have things already open and loaded up. [/QUOTE]
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how much does processor speed matter?
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