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Dual-core Athlon 64 X2 Laptop Reviewed

Steve from Hexus writes "Dual core finds its way inside a laptop (albeit a not-so-portable DTR) in the form of Rockdirect's Xtreme64. The DTR features an Athlon 64 X2 4800+, two 7200rpm hard drives and a GeForce Go 6800 Ultra GPU. HEXUS.net has a review of the laptop, one of the most powerful we've seen hit the market to date." From the article: "Rather than change a formula that works, Rockdirect has opted to stick with the Clevo D900-based chassis that its other performance-based laptops use. The obvious downsides are bulkiness and weight, with the laptop sitting almost 5cm high and weighing in at 5.7kg. It's a desktop replacement in the truest sense of the words, and with an 8kg travel weight (including charger and supplied carrying case) and relatively poor battery life, it's about as portable as a concrete slab."

8 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Tax advantage by MichaelSmith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At my workplace we can salary sacrifice laptops but not desktops. This means you pay for the system out of your pre-tax income, which can make a good laptop cheaper than an equivalent desktop system.

    Its a silly rort, but it leads to people buying systems like this one because its portable.

    1. Re:Tax advantage by undeadly · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Its a silly rort, but it leads to people buying systems like this one because its portable.

      It's also most likely sounds like a vacum cleaner due to fans needed to cool components in that constrained space.

  2. Just Wait by soda160289 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just wait until they start throwing server parts in there. Have you ever wanted to host a giant Oracle database ON THE GO?

  3. It has a parallel port by Saven+Marek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Has anyone even seen any parallel port peripherals in the last 10 years?

    And then it skimps on firewire by only giving unpowered slow firewire 400

  4. Dual core... by nurhussein · · Score: 5, Funny

    So you can cook both of your balls at once.

    1. Re:Dual core... by nurhussein · · Score: 4, Funny
      The stories about balls cooking are highly exaggerated. Only make sure you watch out when you slam down the lid! ;-)
      I don't see how it's a problem unless you rest your family jewels on the touchpad.
  5. Re:These specs are indeed impressive... by sessamoid · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What's the battery life of a goldfish?

    Probably about as long as an African swallow can carry a coconut.

    --
    "No, no, no. Don't tug on that. You never know what it might be attached to."
  6. Re:Does it matter? by hattig · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah, the system has two cores in it, but the term dual-core really means a single chip with two processor cores on it, connected via something (the cache, the on-chip arbiter or whatever) and then attaching to the rest of the system via a single interface.

    AMD's processors are dual-core as they connect via an on-chip arbiter, the SRQ. They then connect to the rest of the system via a HyperTransport link. AMD's next core revision, the F-Step, will have 4 core connections from the SRQ, allowing for future quad-core processors.

    Intel's current 'dual-core' processors aren't really dual-core as they connect to the FSB independently. Indeed Intel's latest Presler processors have separate dies on the processor packaging. In practice however it doesn't really matter that much, so they get away with calling it 'dual-core' when it is technically SMP on a chip. Yonah will be Intel's first true dual-core processor because the cores are connected at the L2 cache level, which they share.

    So now people defined the number of cores a processor has by the number of cores per socket in the system. In your system you have one core per socket, so the processors are single core, the system is dual-processor. In the reviewed laptop there are two cores in one socket, for the system is single-processor, but the processor is dual-core. Quite simple really.