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- 20 Oct 2008
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OK, as any of you who have read and replied to any of my threads will know by now, I am a beginner who asks lots of silly questions - however, I am learning, albeit slowly...
So, todays question is - why should I overclock ?
I don't play games, but am ripping loads of cd's, do a little photo-editing, so nothing major. My cpu is an E8400 wolfdale, mobo is an Asus P5QL with 4gb ram powered by a Corsair 650W psu. Temps are already low, and I am getting a sunbeam core cooler in a few days, so expect them to be even lower.
Now, for someone who uses his pc in a 'non-intensive' way (ie no games etc) would there be any point in overclocking, and what difference would it make - meaning just how would I see any difference ? I understand that gaming will be faster and easier, but for 'normal' use, just what difference does it make - do apps load faster, does the pc boot faster or what ?
So please explain exactly what happens IN EVERYDAY USE when one overclocks please !
Cheers,
Steve
So, todays question is - why should I overclock ?
I don't play games, but am ripping loads of cd's, do a little photo-editing, so nothing major. My cpu is an E8400 wolfdale, mobo is an Asus P5QL with 4gb ram powered by a Corsair 650W psu. Temps are already low, and I am getting a sunbeam core cooler in a few days, so expect them to be even lower.
Now, for someone who uses his pc in a 'non-intensive' way (ie no games etc) would there be any point in overclocking, and what difference would it make - meaning just how would I see any difference ? I understand that gaming will be faster and easier, but for 'normal' use, just what difference does it make - do apps load faster, does the pc boot faster or what ?
So please explain exactly what happens IN EVERYDAY USE when one overclocks please !
Cheers,
Steve