Soldato
- Joined
- 10 Apr 2004
- Posts
- 13,496
Playing something in quicktime for me actually reduces CPU time not increases it as it's only drawing the video, not the entire screen.
Weird tho.
Weird tho.
OSX under load begins to falter, if your used to a fast computer like me, being impatient is the only thing OSX cant cope with.
As for price, you cant complain, its a MacBook - you, me and every other owner all paid for the Apple symbol, not the hardware it comes with.
As for price, you cant complain, its a MacBook - you, me and every other owner all paid for the Apple symbol, not the hardware it comes with.
Very true mate. A laptop costing half as much running Windows 7 will outperform a Macbook. With Apple, you're mainly paying for the name and image.
All show, no GO!!
Very true mate. A laptop costing half as much running Windows 7 will outperform a Macbook. With Apple, you're mainly paying for the name and image.
All show, no GO!!
OSX under load begins to falter, if your used to a fast computer like me, being impatient is the only thing OSX cant cope with.
Very true mate. A laptop costing half as much running Windows 7 will outperform a Macbook. With Apple, you're mainly paying for the name and image.
All show, no GO!!
Anyway, back to the topic.
I have a late 2009 2.4Ghz C2D with 4Gb ram and I found it stuttered playing back full 1080p video using VLC. The solution was to use Plex as I believe it utilises both cores where as VLC can only use one. Give that a try.
I wonder if the first one had some problem with cooling, making it throttle things down to prevent overheating. Poor cooling could also explain the poor reliability too. I remember reading when ifixit did a teardown of the new mbp they found excessive amounts of thermal paste was used