I plan on buying a new laptop and the 2.5 GHz is hard to find in the new ones. I'm seeing 1.8 GHz with up to 4 GHz with 4 cores. Hesitant to buy because of the 1.8GHz but sales people tell me because it has 4 cores it can handle data equal to a 2.5 GHz dual core. I'm not tech savvy so want to make sure I'm okay with this laptop.
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"Cores" = the term used for the computer brain that does the actual work. The i5 (and some i7) Intel chips have 4 cores on them. Most i7 have 6 cores. You don't want a dual core; that is old technology. Think of Cores as "how many sprinklers are running at the same time?"
GigaHertz = Speed. Think of "how fast is the water coming out or those sprinklers?" High pressure or low = speed.
Memory and Disk and graphics card memory = Space = how much Room is there to store and process how much data? Graphics cards also have a speed consideration = how fast does the screen handle image refreshes, moving the mouse, opening a new window, etc.
I see this System Requirements page has Minimum and Recommended:
"Cores" = the term used for the computer brain that does the actual work. The i5 (and some i7) Intel chips have 4 cores on them. Most i7 have 6 cores. You don't want a dual core; that is old technology. Think of Cores as "how many sprinklers are running at the same time?"
GigaHertz = Speed. Think of "how fast is the water coming out or those sprinklers?" High pressure or low = speed.
Memory and Disk and graphics card memory = Space = how much Room is there to store and process how much data? Graphics cards also have a speed consideration = how fast does the screen handle image refreshes, moving the mouse, opening a new window, etc.
I see this System Requirements page has Minimum and Recommended:
A computer can be Optimized = cleaned, and would run like new. I just recently updated an HP i7 W7 running a 2nd generation CPU to W10. I cannot believe the difference; it's like it got a heart and lung transplant.
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