Thursday 27 November 2014

Compare Amd Processors Performance

Compare AMD Processors Performance


If you want to compare the performance of two or more AMD processors, you need look no farther than each unit's technical specifications. You do, however, need to know exactly what those technical specifications mean. This involves knowing things like bus speed and cache size and how those numbers related to the overall performance and quality of a particular computer processor.


Instructions


1. Look at the overall speed of your AMD processors. The speed will be measured in megahertz or gigahertz, and the higher the number the better. A 2.0 gigahertz processor is faster (and therefore better) than a 1.0 gigahertz processor. However, a 1.0 gigahertz processor would be faster (and therefore better) than a 500 megahertz processor.


2. Look at how many cores are available on an AMD processor. A multicore AMD processor means that a unit has separate, little processors all working together. You would take the speed and multiply it by the number of cores to find out its equivalent speed to a single core unit. So a single core 2 gigahertz processor, for example, isn't going to be as fast as a quad (4) core 2 gigahertz processor, which has an equivalent speed of 8 gigahertz.


3. Look at the cache size. The cache size is how much dedicated memory a processor has. A larger cache size allows an AMD processor to perform a command and get the next command ready for performing at the same time. The larger the cache size, the better the processor.


4. Look at the bus speed for an AMD processor. Bus speed refers to how fast an AMD processor can transfer data back and forth between your computer. The higher the bus speed, the faster your computer is going to be able to communicate with your processor to tell it what commands need to be performed and vice versa.

Tags: cache size, gigahertz processor, better than, Compare Processors, Compare Processors Performance, core gigahertz