T
tbone
I'm trying to find out what the basic differences are between the
normal workstation-type processors (Core 2 Duo, Extreme) and the
comparable core-count Xeon chips. Xeons appear to be oriented to
server use; why is that?
I'm looking into getting a new machine. This is not for gaming; it is
for my main development/daily use machine where I run 20-30 apps
concurrently all day long, including file sharing, compilers, music
playback, disk backup, photo editing, and more. Dell offers machines
with both Core 2 Duo and Dual-core Xeon.
I also am considering the new quad cores available. I think they would
perform well for my use.
To be sure I'd get the most out of these processors, I'd want 64-bit
support so I'm planning on XP x64 (I will NOT do DRM with Vista).
Linux is only an option if a Windows virtual machine will work on it.
I don't have time to fool around with it. Are programs generally
compatible with x64, or are there issues?
Advice and/or references appreciated!
thanks
tbone
normal workstation-type processors (Core 2 Duo, Extreme) and the
comparable core-count Xeon chips. Xeons appear to be oriented to
server use; why is that?
I'm looking into getting a new machine. This is not for gaming; it is
for my main development/daily use machine where I run 20-30 apps
concurrently all day long, including file sharing, compilers, music
playback, disk backup, photo editing, and more. Dell offers machines
with both Core 2 Duo and Dual-core Xeon.
I also am considering the new quad cores available. I think they would
perform well for my use.
To be sure I'd get the most out of these processors, I'd want 64-bit
support so I'm planning on XP x64 (I will NOT do DRM with Vista).
Linux is only an option if a Windows virtual machine will work on it.
I don't have time to fool around with it. Are programs generally
compatible with x64, or are there issues?
Advice and/or references appreciated!
thanks
tbone