windows slowers down the longer you leave it on the buffers begin to fill up but if you have quite a bit of ram or a ram cleaning program this won't be a problem
Dells generally have adequate cooling to keep the CPU stable under load. (remember the CPUs will always be at stock unless you have some models of XPS) My Dell Dimension P4 3GHZ runs at 100% load 24/7 and has no instablility problems, as does my C2D.
Does this only apply to the newer or recent Dells? My friend has a Dell from I think, 3 years ago. And whatever program I installed to monitor it's temps, it doesn't show. Whether it be Everest, Core Temp (found out they don't support P4s), and Speedfan.
Does this only apply to the newer or recent Dells? My friend has a Dell from I think, 3 years ago. And whatever program I installed to monitor it's temps, it doesn't show. Whether it be Everest, Core Temp (found out they don't support P4s), and Speedfan.
****, what are you running to get 100% all the time?
Dell's were previously terrible for cooling. Last time I know about them being overheated would be around 2005-6 so I am not sure, they may have advanced in their technology.
****, what are you running to get 100% all the time?
Dell's were previously terrible for cooling. Last time I know about them being overheated would be around 2005-6 so I am not sure, they may have advanced in their technology.
****, what are you running to get 100% all the time?
Dell's were previously terrible for cooling. Last time I know about them being overheated would be around 2005-6 so I am not sure, they may have advanced in their technology.
Electricity bill is not a problem so I will bill leaving it up 24/7 from now on and possibly participating in Folding@home or some such. Should I also just leave the hard disk spinning, like not make it spin down after 20 mins??