Question:
My cpu gets high really easily, do i buy a more powerful one?
anonymous
2008-11-08 11:43:29 UTC
Sorry if the question sounds silly but im not too smart in the hardware area. I have 2 central processors info on them:
Intel Celeron 3201 MHz:2 node(s)
generic name :x86 Family 15 Model 4 Stepping 3
Codename: Tejas

How can i make it so that when I launch a program or launch a virus can that my cpu doesnt go too high, more like make it so it can handle more.
Six answers:
anonymous
2008-11-08 11:59:49 UTC
Your CPU is meant to run high and for games it will be near the top for evey thing loading in the background. You are more efficient when at max.
kompubear
2008-11-08 11:53:03 UTC
The problem is, you have a celeron processor.

How long does the CPU usage stay high for? How much RAM do you have? Generally, at this day and age you need at least 1GB of RAM to achieve a 'normal' computing experience.

If you want, you could look into the Pentium 4 processors, or even better the Extreme Edition Pentium 4 processors (more expensive.)
xGeistx tgih
2008-11-08 11:49:50 UTC
um... "launch a virus"?



If your CPU isn't running up to the speed you want from it, your only feasible option without buying a new one would be to try overclocking it in various ways, depending on your motherboard, this could be accomplished via F12 options as your computer is starting. Most computers bought from a big name like Dell can't be overclocked in this way tho, at least not ones that come with a Celeron.
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2016-10-07 15:02:02 UTC
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Texas
2008-11-08 11:49:35 UTC
What I can say is that a faster CPU won't really help you much.



For bad programs such as virus/worm, if your computer is running some bad program faster CPU just makes bad stuff happen faster.



The important thing is to clean up any virus/worm stuff you have. Many tools do this, some free ones, I like best one called HijackThis.
anonymous
2008-11-08 12:06:49 UTC
high?

it comes down to a few things: overclocking, FSB and cpu fequency.

all of which require a bit of smarts in the hardware dept.

if you mean hot, then get a big *** fan and heatsink for it.

in terms of handling more you will probably want a CPU upgrade, but this might mean a motherboard upgrade, RAM upgrade etc it depends where your weakest link is nowa dn if it's actually your CPU that's the slowest part of the system.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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