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It seems like you have to run two or more applications simultaneously to see the big speed improvements. I wonder if a VST host and VSTs count as separate applications? My guess is no. I think you would see a dramatic improvement if you are using two music applications with something like ReWire. On 1/7/06, Kris Hartung <khartung@cableone.net> wrote: > Suppose you are burning a copy of Mr. Bungle's first CD (which would >break > any machine), and also watching a 1.2 GB mpeg video of our favorite porn > flick, "Zelda Does Zurich", which you've just downloaded from eMule. :) > It's not the best multi-tasking example, I admit, unless you also have an > external CD burner, in addition to your notebooks DVD/CD player bay. >Another > good one is having your Nortaon anti-virus program run a full scan, and > trying to do "anything else". That always pisses me off. > > Kris > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Travis Hartnett" <travishartnett@gmail.com> > To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> > Sent: Saturday, January 07, 2006 12:37 AM > Subject: Re: Intel's New Dual Core Mobile Processor Announced > > > The real trick is how you have both a CD and a DVD in the drive at the > same time... > > On 1/6/06, Kris Hartung <khartung@cableone.net> wrote: > > > > Keith Kressin, director of marketing for Intel's mobile products group, > says > > that games should look better on Core Duo notebooks but that >multitasking > > would benefit the most, as our tests show. "The more demanding the > > task--ripping a CD while watching a movie, for instance--the better the > > performance improvement," he says. > > > > > > -- Art Simon simart@null.net http://art.simon.tripod.com http://artsimon.iuma.com