So, basiclly dual cores means two processors in one?
By the way, in one of the books I read (the one I understood <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/rolleyes.gif" alt="" />) they called that queue 'pipelines'. In these pipelines they reduced big CISC-instructions into small RISC-instructions. But this basiclly mean you can't eve do one instruction/clockcycle, you have to use 20 (or something like that in a Pentium4. AMD's are shorter, and that's why they can run on much lower clockfrequences and still be as effective as Pentium4). But dual-core means you can run two CISC-instructions at the same time, and so basiclly double the proccessor's effectiviness?
And I still only have letters on the DDR-variations <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/suspicion.gif" alt="" />.
Was planning on writeing a part about either computer theory, or a preview on what my site will look like tomorrow.
Übereil