Religion & Spirituality4 mins ago
Dual Core
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What does Dual-Core mean in Computer Technology. Thanks for any replies.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Most (or at least, older), computers have a single processor, and you'll have seen Pentium 1 or Pentium 3 or Pentium 4 on the box.
This is the processor, the brains of the machine that does all the work. It's just one single processor.
The processor has a clock inside it, which lets it time its cycles for doing work. This is the GHz number you see. To get more work done (i.e., work faster for you), you want a higher GHz number. This means, a higher clock speed is required.
However, if you increase the clock speed (the usual way manufacturers of processors tend to make them faster), you also get some bad things too. For one, you increase the heat output of the processor. This is generally bad, especially for confined computers like laptops.
As a solution, imagine you get two of these processors and sandwich them together to put them on one physical board. This is known as dual core. Each processor is a core, and you have two of them on one actual 'chip' or 'board', so it's a dual core.
This happily speeds things up, and actually doesn't have all the bad things associated with it as plain clock speed increasing did.
For the end user, it means that you get better performance.
(To complicate matters, you have to also make sure that the software, the operating system, such as Windows that's running on it, supports dual core. Not all versions of Windows do, but most recent versions do, as far as I know.)
Make sense?
This is the processor, the brains of the machine that does all the work. It's just one single processor.
The processor has a clock inside it, which lets it time its cycles for doing work. This is the GHz number you see. To get more work done (i.e., work faster for you), you want a higher GHz number. This means, a higher clock speed is required.
However, if you increase the clock speed (the usual way manufacturers of processors tend to make them faster), you also get some bad things too. For one, you increase the heat output of the processor. This is generally bad, especially for confined computers like laptops.
As a solution, imagine you get two of these processors and sandwich them together to put them on one physical board. This is known as dual core. Each processor is a core, and you have two of them on one actual 'chip' or 'board', so it's a dual core.
This happily speeds things up, and actually doesn't have all the bad things associated with it as plain clock speed increasing did.
For the end user, it means that you get better performance.
(To complicate matters, you have to also make sure that the software, the operating system, such as Windows that's running on it, supports dual core. Not all versions of Windows do, but most recent versions do, as far as I know.)
Make sense?
A CPU is the silicon chip inside a computer that does all the hard work. It's the thing that runs the operating system, the programs and so on.
A dual CPU computer (mostly servers and high end workstations) has a motherboard with two CPU sockets that will take two separate CPUs.
A dual core CPU is a single chip that sits in a single socket on the motherboard that contains two CPU cores.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both configurations.
The idea is that the computer can then do more things at once, i.e. the CPU isn't having to be shared between running the OS and all the programs.
Modern single core CPUs are so fast that for surfing the internet, word processing and other non-intensive stuff dual-core CPUs offer little advantage. There are very few programs that the average home user uses that would actually make use of multiple cores. I imagine we'll start seeing multi-threaded games but as it stands, for home users, dual-core is little more than a marketing gimmick.
A dual CPU computer (mostly servers and high end workstations) has a motherboard with two CPU sockets that will take two separate CPUs.
A dual core CPU is a single chip that sits in a single socket on the motherboard that contains two CPU cores.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both configurations.
The idea is that the computer can then do more things at once, i.e. the CPU isn't having to be shared between running the OS and all the programs.
Modern single core CPUs are so fast that for surfing the internet, word processing and other non-intensive stuff dual-core CPUs offer little advantage. There are very few programs that the average home user uses that would actually make use of multiple cores. I imagine we'll start seeing multi-threaded games but as it stands, for home users, dual-core is little more than a marketing gimmick.