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Changing Amount of Processors to two on Windows 7

Hey just got a acer laptop with Windows 7 heard it's a lot faster when you change the amount of processors been used does anyone know how to do this ?? cheers

Comments

  • Hammyman
    Hammyman Posts: 9,913 Forumite
    Install a second CPU which you cannot do in a laptop. You cannot add more than there are cores or processors in the computer.
  • penrhyn
    penrhyn Posts: 15,215 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture Combo Breaker
    Buy a new laptop with a dual or quad core processor.
    PS What processor does your existing laptop contain?

    Try running the windows experience test see where you score and what the limiting factor may be.

    You could download and run speccy which will list all your hardware.
    That gum you like is coming back in style.
  • John_Gray
    John_Gray Posts: 5,847 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    TomB_88 wrote: »
    ...heard it's a lot faster when you change the amount of processors been used...
    You shouldn't believe all you hear - apart from the two posts above mine!
  • busenbust
    busenbust Posts: 4,782 Forumite
    might be dependent too on version of windows -- 64bit .
  • RobTang
    RobTang Posts: 1,064 Forumite
    Hes talking about a debug variable that allows you to force windows to use a certain amount of cpus during startup.

    It only effects startup and the default value should use all avaliable cores / cpus anyway...

    However some people claim to have an improved startup time, backed up by results from a start time timer tool, but personally I think the results are dubious.

    The only definative is that reducing the number of cores avaliable to startup will slow it down.
  • Spank
    Spank Posts: 1,751 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    You can change how many cores an application uses (known as affinity)

    Press CTRL+ALT+DEL to open the task manager
    Go to processes
    Right click on the application
    Then left click on Set Affinity
    Tick/untick how many cores you want it to use
  • Spank wrote: »
    You can change how many cores an application uses (known as affinity)..

    Doing that won't give any performance increases, it just introduces complexities that potentially could lead to a decrease in performance.

    Once again it's a setting that's only intended for use when debugging.
  • John_Gray
    John_Gray Posts: 5,847 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    anewhope wrote: »
    [Affinity] Once again it's a setting that's only intended for use when debugging.
    Not always! For example, MS SQL Server was/is licenced by the number of CPUs which it runs on, so if you have a twin Xeon server and a SQL Server licence only for one CPU, then you have to specify that it runs on CPU1 or on CPU2.

    Not something that the OP needs to be bothered about, though .
  • True, although as you say, it's an entirely different situation.
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