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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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Is this a usefull option. It can be found in task manager. It appears to
allow to let yoiu assign certain tasks to one the the processors in the dual core processor. I have an athlon live 64 c2 4200+ am2 socket. How should I use it to the most benefit if it is worth using? |
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"troy marrs" wrote in message ... Is this a usefull option. It can be found in task manager. It appears to allow to let yoiu assign certain tasks to one the the processors in the dual core processor. I have an athlon live 64 c2 4200+ am2 socket. How should I use it to the most benefit if it is worth using? You should leave it alone. For general use the computer is far better at deciding how to spend its resources than we are. |
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Robert Moir;236365 Wrote: "troy marrs" wrote in message ... Is this a usefull option. It can be found in task manager. It appears to allow to let yoiu assign certain tasks to one the the processors in the dual core processor. I have an athlon live 64 c2 4200+ am2 socket. How should I use it to the most benefit if it is worth using? You should leave it alone. For general use the computer is far better at deciding how to spend its resources than we are. Ye Gods !!! With this attitude we wont learn anything ! Just as an example, If I have downloaded a huge RAR file, and I want to unpack it but still use the computer ( Normally it tie up all the resources until its fininshed ) I would set affinty to one of the processors and allow the other one to carry on with everything else. -- Bytesback ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Bytesback's Profile: http://www.vista64.net/forums/member.php?userid=1668 View this thread: http://www.vista64.net/forums/showthread.php?t=49230 |
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"Bytesback" wrote in message ... Robert Moir;236365 Wrote: "troy marrs" wrote in message ... Is this a usefull option. It can be found in task manager. It appears to allow to let yoiu assign certain tasks to one the the processors in the dual core processor. I have an athlon live 64 c2 4200+ am2 socket. How should I use it to the most benefit if it is worth using? You should leave it alone. For general use the computer is far better at deciding how to spend its resources than we are. Ye Gods !!! With this attitude we wont learn anything ! Just as an example, If I have downloaded a huge RAR file, and I want to unpack it but still use the computer ( Normally it tie up all the resources until its fininshed ) I would set affinty to one of the processors and allow the other one to carry on with everything else. -- Bytesback ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Bytesback's Profile: http://www.vista64.net/forums/member.php?userid=1668 View this thread: http://www.vista64.net/forums/showthread.php?t=49230 How do you go about doing this? Do you set affinity for every process to one cpu first? Do you leave it that way? Or do you then set every process back to dual affinity? Seems like a lot of keystrokes/clicking. |
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"Bytesback" wrote in message ... Ye Gods !!! With this attitude we wont learn anything ! I've learnt plenty, thanks. Just as an example, If I have downloaded a huge RAR file, and I want to unpack it but still use the computer ( Normally it tie up all the resources until its fininshed ) I would set affinty to one of the processors and allow the other one to carry on with everything else. Fair point. I myself would change the process priority to 'below normal', so it runs as more of a background task, thus enabling it to use all the resources it wants to, provided I am not using them myself. This would enable it to take advantage of either core should it find spare resources to do so, and also allow it to duck out of the way a bit if my normal use is using a lot of processor time. I wouldn't like to say if my solution is 'better' or 'worse' than yours, but it's an interesting thought isn't it? |
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Robert Moir;236591 Wrote: "Bytesback" wrote in message ... Ye Gods !!! With this attitude we wont learn anything ! I've learnt plenty, thanks. Just as an example, If I have downloaded a huge RAR file, and I want to unpack it but still use the computer ( Normally it tie up all the resources until its fininshed ) I would set affinty to one of the processors and allow the other one to carry on with everything else. Fair point. I myself would change the process priority to 'below normal', so it runs as more of a background task, thus enabling it to use all the resources it wants to, provided I am not using them myself. This would enable it to take advantage of either core should it find spare resources to do so, and also allow it to duck out of the way a bit if my normal use is using a lot of processor time. I wouldn't like to say if my solution is 'better' or 'worse' than yours, but it's an interesting thought isn't it? My apologies for being rude ![]() However, if you dont tinker and "get stuck in" you dont learn. Pleased to see that you do ![]() That is an interesting point you have, proves theres more than one way to do it ![]() -- Bytesback |
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Robert's way would be the best as winrar can use both cores which will get
the work done faster while remaining responsive (priority change). I wouldn't encourage users to go around and start playing with advanced settings that can either degrade their performance (this case) or make them think they are more knowledgeable than they are. I can see the person's next post be, "Help I browsed around in the registry and deleted some entries and now the XXXX doesn't work". If you don't know what the red button does, don't push it. When you know what the red button does, you don't push it still unless instructed to. "Bytesback" wrote in message ... Robert Moir;236591 Wrote: "Bytesback" wrote in message ... Ye Gods !!! With this attitude we wont learn anything ! I've learnt plenty, thanks. Just as an example, If I have downloaded a huge RAR file, and I want to unpack it but still use the computer ( Normally it tie up all the resources until its fininshed ) I would set affinty to one of the processors and allow the other one to carry on with everything else. Fair point. I myself would change the process priority to 'below normal', so it runs as more of a background task, thus enabling it to use all the resources it wants to, provided I am not using them myself. This would enable it to take advantage of either core should it find spare resources to do so, and also allow it to duck out of the way a bit if my normal use is using a lot of processor time. I wouldn't like to say if my solution is 'better' or 'worse' than yours, but it's an interesting thought isn't it? My apologies for being rude ![]() However, if you dont tinker and "get stuck in" you dont learn. Pleased to see that you do ![]() That is an interesting point you have, proves theres more than one way to do it ![]() -- Bytesback |