btw machine:
- core 2 duo 2ghz 4mb cache
- 1gb ddr2 667mhz
- ati x1600 128mb
- 160gb 7200rpm seagate sata disk
- 17" widescreen tft
- web cam + microphone
- mouse + keyboard
- wlan + bluetooth
- dvd+/-rw
- 3x usb2
- 1x firewire
- optical digital io
- built in speakers which are quite good
- remote control (!)
- os comparable to xp pro + media centre.
- xcode (eqiv to visual studio)
- 2y warranty on entire system no pissing around rma'ing components)
- takes up as much room as a 18" TFT does
- decent office suite .... £55.
£799 from john lewis - i just walked in and bought it on the way home (no dell 50 quid delivery charge etc).
You can't really get that for the same money in PC land.
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Reply to: Laptops. Are specs going backwards ?
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Previously on "Laptops. Are specs going backwards ?"
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Originally posted by bogeymanHuge chunks of C ?
Who, exactly, has trouble compiling 'huge chunks' of C any more?
Even a modest Intel or AMD processor, with a stingy amount of memory, would absolutelty piss through any amount of ANSI C code using a modern C compiler (from GNU, MS, Borland etc.).
What C compiler are you using that gives you this impression?
Now C++ is a different story, but compiling ANSI C should be as simple as.
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Originally posted by TheMonkeyI just bought a Core 2 Duo box (2GHz) - well a Mac one. Scares the crap out of me how fast it is (compared to older machine compiling a huge chunk of C!). I reckon each core is around the same speed as a 3.06GHz P4.
The E6800 is unlocked - but costs about £700.
Just for the chip.
For a couple of hundred more you can build a PC around an E6600 (the chip I use) (£100 for motherboard, £200 for cpu, c£100 for hard drive(s), £150 for graphics card, £100 for case and £150 for memory). Monitors are dirt cheap too - I have a 19" widescreen that cost £119, and is a bargain for the price.
The E6600 is cheapest of the Core Duo's that ups the cache per core from 1 MBto 2MB. Runs at 2.4 Ghz (stock), can easily reach 3Ghz.
I returned a new AMD dual core AM2 setup to go Conroe - and its significantly faster.
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Originally posted by OrangeHoppergcc.
Errmm, yes, GCC. But compiling what? ANSI C or C++ ?
C++ is a fully object-oriented (and overblown) language whereas C is one step up from assembler!
They share some basic syntax and lexical structure but only in the same sense that chalk and cheese are both solids.
A complex C++ program takes several 'shedloads' more computational power and working storage to compile than complex ANSI C one does.
You can't say 'compiling huge wads of C on this box is much faster than it was on my last box' and expect anybody to take any meaning from it. Can you?
Quantify!Last edited by bogeyman; 25 September 2006, 19:13.
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Originally posted by cojakI've decided to get a Mac for my next laptop... Let's see how it goes...
Can anyone recommend a Mac retailer, btw?
There's not much price variation. Apple control all the reseller prices with an iron fist.
Sieg Heil Jobs
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Originally posted by TheMonkeyI just bought a Core 2 Duo box (2GHz) - well a Mac one. Scares the crap out of me how fast it is (compared to older machine compiling a huge chunk of C!). I reckon each core is around the same speed as a 3.06GHz P4.
Who, exactly, has trouble compiling 'huge chunks' of C any more?
Even a modest Intel or AMD processor, with a stingy amount of memory, would absolutelty piss through any amount of ANSI C code using a modern C compiler (from GNU, MS, Borland etc.).
What C compiler are you using that gives you this impression?
Now C++ is a different story, but compiling ANSI C should be as simple as.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by cojakI've decided to get a Mac for my next laptop... Let's see how it goes...
Can anyone recommend a Mac retailer, btw?
Leave a comment:
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I've decided to get a Mac for my next laptop... Let's see how it goes...
Can anyone recommend a Mac retailer, btw?
Leave a comment:
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I just bought a Core 2 Duo box (2GHz) - well a Mac one. Scares the crap out of me how fast it is (compared to older machine compiling a huge chunk of C!). I reckon each core is around the same speed as a 3.06GHz P4.
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Do let us know how you put the fire out without ruining the suit of the chap next to you...
Dell Fire Safety tipsLast edited by cojak; 23 September 2006, 14:32.
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Processor architectures have changed.
I have a Pentium 4 running at 3.6 Ghz, and it is considerably outperformed by an Intel Core Duo even if I underclock the later to 1.6Ghz.
Leave a comment:
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