Jump to content

anonymous52090

New Members
  • Posts

    9
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling

anonymous52090's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/5)

0

Reputation

  1. Any recent dual core processor will blow any Celeron away. The Celeron processor, even when it came out, was never a great chip. It was released to be a budget processor. I have also heard from some computer techs that Celeron's don't run at their full clock speed. But it is not just the clock speed of a processor that matters, a lot of it is the architecture of the chip. Taking Intel's Core2Duo line for example, it has quite a few platforms the most recent being Penryn, and before Penryn is was Santa Rosa. And if you were to compare a 2.5Ghz Santa Rosa chip to a 2.5Ghz Penryn chip, the Penryn would come out about 10% faster - because of its better architecture. And the Penryn wasn't truely even a new platform, it was a "refresh" of the Santa Rosa platform so other performance gaps would be larger. Brandon
  2. I agree that there will always be some people who look for the cheaper route. But it won't pay off in the end. Because how well something works is directly tied to how well it is programmed. Brandon
  3. Unlikely, if they did it would completely cripple MySQL forever.
  4. gameyin, chris, If you guys think for a minute you could produce the same quality code any of the moderators / full time developers here could produce then you are just crazy and quite obviously still have a lot of growing up to do. I myself am only 17, and don't have a problem admitting that professional developers are going to be able to develop code ten fold better than mine - that is just logic and common sense. Please stop acting so immature and grow up a little, you are just making everyone else (including me) in your age group look like an idiot with your arrogance. Brandon
  5. First post here... So hey everyone. I'm about to by a Macbook Pro, running Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) 64 Bit. And want to use Zend Studio, but the Zend website says it only works on 32 bit Macs. I didn't know if this was just wrong and out of date because Macs have been 64 bit forever now... So I contacted Zend sales, and they didn't seem to really know. Is anyone here using Zend Studio on a 64 bit Mac? Specifically on Leopard? Brandon
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.