On Friday 29 August 2003 23:57 pm, Ben Rosenberg wrote:
I have partly a question and partly a survey. I just got a P4 2.4ghz (c) proc, mb w/ 512M DDR400 dropped in my lap at work so I could upgrade my workstation in the office. It does have hyperthreading. I've never user HT hardware and I've heard conflicting reports about it. I have it turned off right now and I haven't installed the SMP kernel since I'm not sure I'm going to bother. I guess my question is...for a workstation doing webbrowsing, documents in OO, Gaim, playing mp3's and s**tloads of xterms. Does HT give or take away from the enviroment as far as speed and all that. All opinions are welcome. :)
No one's taken this on so I'll give it a crack: I'm going to assume that HT works in a similar manner to having two cpu in SMP formation... (although something tells me that it's not quite that efficient.) 1) Having one CPU that is twice (or close to twice) as fast as two cpu's is always the best way to go. 2) The reason for (1) is that most of your computing time is going to be spent on one task, and in an SMP situation you can only apply 1 cpu to that task at a time. Therefore, a 2Ghz cpu in that situation will do MUCH better than two cpu's of 1Ghz. 3) Given that you have (two) cpus so-to-speak, there is not much harm in using HT. There might be a slight addition of system overhead in scheduling two cpu's but that should be gained by the 2nd cpu being able to handle other tasks such as spooling and printing, and all the other system type threads that occur while your doing your own tasks of word processing, etc. 4) On the other hand, since I don't know much about HT, if it takes a 2Ghz cpu and turns it into (mostly) two 1Ghz cpu's by sharing all of the resources in the chip, then it would be best not to use HT. So in a nutshell, it shouldn't hurt, might help a little, you probably won't notice any difference, and besides, it's a neat conversation piece. :-) -- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ + Bruce S. Marshall bmarsh@bmarsh.com Bellaire, MI 08/30/03 13:36 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ "Common sense is instinct. Enough of it is Genius." - George Bernard Shaw