To measure the speed of laptops is not as complicated as it looks. We just have to understand that the idea of speed can be factored through (1) the CPU processing power and (2) the graphical prowess for other tasks likePC gaming or graphics-accelerated creation of content. These two ( CPU and Graphics ) are really very different things.
Some laptops are strong in one area and not the other. One very good example is you might have a notebook with a top-end processor packing lots of cores and threads, but paired with a minimal graphics solution ( the processor's integrated graphics silicon, which is modest compared to a discrete graphics adapter). This type of laptop like this would net you great performance on programs and workloads that take advantage of lots of CPU resources, but little in the way of power for gaming or applications that rely on graphics acceleration.
On the other hand, having a dedicated graphics processor, the beefier the better, is the key for speed in games. Most of the time, CPU speed will contribute to the gaming equation insofar as it isn't a limiter or bottleneck for the graphics chip.
No comments:
Post a Comment