Six core vs quad core

Is an intel six core cpu 1.5 times better than a intel quad core cpu? When I am using media encoder to produce an hour long HD mp4 file with gpu acceleration would the processing time be significantly less with the six core cpu?

Francis,
Ideally speaking you are correct, but in real life it often does not work out that way. Generally you can expect around 35-45% increase of a hexa core over a quad core, but only if the processes are nicely threaded and there are no other bottlenecks in your system. That is hardly the case and that is why in practice the gains are often smaller, due to other bottlenecks appearing (disk I/O, memory or GPU) and overhead from the OS and application.

Similar Messages

  • Dual core or Quad Core

    I know elements will run on a "Dual core or Quad Core" system, but will it use the "Dual core or Quad Core" feature

    Yes, the Editor will make good use of multiple processors, while the Organizer appears to make somewhat less use of multiple processors. PSE 7 has a severe bug with respect to raw files, but that's fixed in PSE 7.

  • Macbook pro, dual core or quad core?

    Hey guys Im getting an early college present and was wondering which Macbook I should look at. This will be my one and only computer while im in college. No photo editing or anything like that, maybe some video editing but it will be almost none. Will be used to surf the web and write documents. My question is should i get the dual core or quad core processor? Will it really matter for what i want it for? One thing I absolutely hate is lag! So the faster of the two the better.

    tony477g wrote:
    So if I went with the quadcore because you guys say it is faster than the 2.9 ghz dualcore. Would the difference be noticable between the 2.6 ghz and the 2.3 ghz? I noticed the 2.6 has 8 gb to the 4gb and 750gb to the 500 gb.
    Well, actually, only one guy said the quad core would be faster, but it is not clear why they said that. You said you were only going to use it "to surf the web and write documents." Well, guess what. You don't need a quad-core for that. You don't need a dual-core for that. I've surfed the web and written documents on my old single-core iPhone. Those tasks are just not that demanding.
    So unless there are more things you want to do that you haven't mentioned, there is just about no way it's worth paying for quad-core or a 2.6GHz processor if all you are going to do is surf the web and write documents.
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    You could surf the web and write documents quite effectively on the least expensive MacBook that Apple sells. But since you do want to keep it throughout all of college, it is a good idea to buy something higher than the bottom of the line. For a Mac for very basic uses that should last four years, I would suggest:
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    13-inch MacBook Pro with 500GB HD storage and 8GB RAM
    13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display with 256GB SSD storage and 8GB RAM
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    I suggested 13-inch because it's more portable than the 15-inch but more comfortable for 4 years than an 11-inch. I chose storage sizes that would be appropriate since you said you would do some video. And I chose 8GB RAM because 4GB may not be enough for 4 years, and also because insufficient RAM is often a bigger cause of lag than CPU or disk speed.
    If you have a limited amount of money, from this point on you'll need to justify why you would want a bigger screen, a faster CPU, or more cores given the two tasks you said you'd be doing most of the time. Because again, if you didn't actually need a Mac, you could write documents and surf the web on an iPad with the Logitech Ultrathin Keyboard Cover and be done for $600.

  • How can I tell if I have an i7 dual core or quad core processor?

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    Regards,
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  • Should I go with a dual core or quad core MacBook?

    Hi all,
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    Most of the time the laptop will be travelling around, but I will also be plugging this into a Thunderbolt Display for more screen space.
    Let me know what you all think! Right now, I am leaning towards the 13" MBP with dual core i7, but this is subject to change. Will it last throughout college?
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    seanbrownie wrote:
    Screen size set aside since I plan on using a TBD most of the time,
    Then you want the more powerful graphics of the 15" with it's dedicated GPU to better/faster drive the external display as it's larger, and larger displays pumps more pixels so you also need the better cooling of the 15"
    would adding more RAM solve the OS X upgrade issues over time?
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    Plus, would upgrading the HD to SSD help in making the jump to say OS X 10.11, 10.12 down the road easier?
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    http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=100008120%2060041492 0&IsNodeId=1&name=513GB%20-%201TB
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    Several of my friends think I'm crazy spending $10,000 on Mac's in 10 years, they are still on their XP towers and haven't paid much more than $2000 over that same time.
    Of course now XP is dead and they have to upgrade to Windows 7 towers, but they really get good value out of their boxes.
    Mac's are not for those tight on a budget, I don't advise. A Windows machine will do the job for most people
    Perhaps a Windows 3D gaming tower and a iPad?

  • Dual-core or Quad-core for Premiere, After Effects, and Photoshop CS4?

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    http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/2009-desktop-cpu-charts-update-1/Adobe-Photoshop-CS-4,1 387.html
    http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/desktop-cpu-charts-2010/Video-Editing-Adobe-After-Effec ts-CS5,2427.html
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  • Dual core versus quad core?

    Is there a noticeable difference in speed when comparing a dual core versus a quad core iMac where the advertised speeds are essentially the same, say -- 2.7 ghz CPUs, both running the latest Mac OS 10.82, and iLife, iWork, or MS Office suite programs for MAC?

    Chances are for the type of work you're doing an i7 iMac would be a complete waste of money. Where  you may benefit is 5 years from now if your work flow changes a lot where you use apps that draw on the power of an i7. However  none of can look into a crystal ball and decide today what we will need years down the road so if you want to bet safe, buy as much as you can afford.

  • Eight Core or Quad Core??

    Hi,
    I'm deciding on the spec for new Mac Pro.
    The eight core is significantly more expensive than the quad core. Is the difference in performance as noticeable?
    My work is mainly hi-res photoshop work - often very large files (between 2 and 5Gb files). Will an eight core make a noticeable difference on that kind of work?
    Also, how does a 2.93GHz quad core compare with a 2.2GHz Eight Core Mac Pro?
    Many thanks,
    Mr Hairdo.

    Heck, even the 2008 Mac Pro (check Specials) is fine and what you need is RAM and other things and SAVE yourself the $1400+, way too over-priced for an 8-core.
    http://store.apple.com/us/browse/home/specialdeals/mac/mac_pro
    Check Barefeats "Pro Apps" article.

  • Happy with 27" core i5 quad core

    Just wanted to post that I'm very happy with my new 27" i5 quad core.
    I'd ordered a core i7 27" on Jan 5th but, like many others, got 2 delay notifications. I cancelled that order and on a whim went to the local Apple store. I didn't know that they actually carried the core i5's at the store. I thought they only had the core 2 duos.
    Anyways, got the machine home last night and everything is perfect. No dead pixels, cracks, or obvious yellowing. It's beautiful!
    I tossed another 4GB of ram to get up to 8GB and am loving it!
    Message was edited by: dbmilam

    Mine is about to come soon
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  • PE10 & Duo Core vs Quad Core

    I'm buying a new Mac and trying to decide between a Duo Core processor or a Quad Core.  Can PE 10 take full advantage of Quad Core multi-threading?

    It really doesn't matter. Even a mac mini is plenty powerful enough to run PSE. It's more important to be sure you have enough ram (although PSE is a 32 bit program, extra ram does help performance by making more available to other programs so that PSE can grab its full 3.2 GB).
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  • Dual core to quad core

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    They also did the first review of 8-core "upgrade"
    Harpertown
    I'd wait until 1Q '08.

  • Dual core vs Quad Core for mild video and photo editing

    I've owned PC's since ever and I'm now contemplating on coming over to the Mac world, my question is would a fully upgraded 13" MBPr Suffice for mild photo and video editing or should I try to shell out the extra cash for a lower end 15" with Quad-Core?
    13" specs
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    16GB 1600MHz DDR3L SDRAM
    512GB PCIe-based Flash Storage
    2199$
    15" specs
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    Sorry, yes it will suffice? if so how many years would I expect this computer to last me? (Sorry I'm really new to apple)

  • MacBook Pro 2011 Core i7 Quad Core 2.2 GHz freezes when running hot!

    I just received my Core i7 2.2 GHz Quad Core 15 inch laptop today. I was eager to put it through its paces. I have been trying to compile/install gcc and watch some HD youtube clips at the same time. As it turns out that's a very bad combo for this laptop. Compiling gcc maxes out all 4 cores and then you add some graphics usage (especially on an external monitor, which kicks in the AMD 6750M chip), the computer overheats. When the CPU Temperature Diode measurement reaches 92 deg C, the computer crashes, every time. I have crashed my new laptop 6 times already this evening, all due to this issue. I kept an eye on my Kill a Watt meter and it pegs near 85 W (battery fully charged). I think a firmwire update to the fan control unit is in definitely needed. The fan is obviously not running aggressively enough. When you have a 45W CPU plus a 30W GPU, plus 13 W of just turning the machine on, then add in WiFi and HDD, you got one hot system. Intel lists a Tjunc of 100 deg C as their temperature limit. Apple needs to figure out either how to gracefully pause while the CPU hit that limits (i.e. not crashing the whole system), or keep their fans running more aggressively when the CPU + GPU activities picks up in a hungry.

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  • Dual core vs Quad core for a Filmmaker?

    Hi, I'm a 14 year-old filmmaker who really wants their next computer to be a mac mini. I am obviously on a tight budget being 14, so I was thinking just buying the standard dual-core processor. But for a filmmaker like myself, is it worth the extra $200 for my heavy-duty video-editing applications? I would use a mixture of Apple Motion 5, and the video-effects program Hitfilm Ultimate. I know quad is faster, but is it worth it for me?
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    So, two "hyperthreaded" cores work as fast as four without hyperthreading, or the difference in speed is so negligible, you wouldn't notice it.  Since the Mac Mini Core i7 is also hyperthreaded, it works as well as dual quad cores, so if you need inudstry standard speed, then the Core i7 would be your best choice.
    As I said though, I can take 1080p video from my Canon Vixia, and edit it with OnLocation or Premiere Pro, and render it with barely a drain on my processor cores (2 or 4). So far, the biggest vid file I've done was about 250Mb, which was about a ten minute shoot. If you're going to work with 2Gb and up, then I'd definitely go with the Core i7 and max the RAM out to 16Gb.

  • Dual core vs quad core and nvidia vs ati

    I'm curious to hear opinions and experiences from both sides...i'm considering purchasing an iMac w/ a quad core and I want to know more about how it performs against a dual core in these areas: Second Life, DVD burning, iMovie, iTunes, Toast, GIMP, Audacity, etc...
    I would appreciate any input on this topic...thanks so much!!!

    Sorry, yes it will suffice? if so how many years would I expect this computer to last me? (Sorry I'm really new to apple)

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