The CPU Question: Slow Quad-Core or Fast Dual-Core?

Normally when you compare two similarly priced PCs these days the specs are extremely close. For whatever reason, with all-in-ones, the specs couldn't possibly be more varied. Dell ships all of its XPS One 24s with an Intel Core 2 Quad Q8200 (2.33GHz) while Apple offers either a 2.80GHz or 3.06GHz Core 2 Duo in its 24" iMacs, leaving us with the not nearly age-old discussion of what's better: a fast dual core or a slow quad core?

In the early days the decision was simple, you only gave up a small amount of clock speed if you opted for quad-core over dual (around 266MHz) but in today's comparison the difference is a bit more staggering. The top end iMac gives you a processor that runs its two cores 733MHz faster than the four cores in the Dell, not to mention that those two cores have more cache than is split among four cores in the XPS One 24. Apple's got a higher clock and more cache, but Dell has more cores, so which is better?

Back when AMD introduced its triple-core Phenom parts I put together a little table illustrating the speedup you get from one, two and four cores in SYSMark 2007:

  SYSMark 2007 Overall E-Learning Video Creation Productivity 3D
Intel Celeron 420 (1 core, 512KB, 1.6GHz) 55 52 55 54 58
Intel Celeron E1200 (2 cores, 512KB, 1.6GHz) 76 68 91 70 78
% Increase from 1 to 2 cores 38% 31% 65% 30% 34%
Intel Core 2 Duo E6750 (2 cores, 4MB, 2.66GHz) 138 147 141 120 145
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6700 (4 cores, 8MB, 2.66GHz) 150 145 177 121 163
% Increase from 2 to 4 cores 8.7% 0% 26% 1% 12%

 

The purpose of the table was to show that while the move from one to two cores is justifiable for the vast majority of users, going from two to four isn't nearly as high yielding. The issue is that while most applications these days are multi-threaded, they are either still bound by the performance of a single thread or they are only able to split the workload two ways, meaning half of the cores on a quad-core CPU would be left with nothing to do. The exceptions are things like video encoding or 3D rendering as you can see from the results above.

To get an idea of general system performance between these two machines I turned to PCMark Vantage, which actually does a good job of comparing similar CPU architectures in a handful of general purpose tests. I'm going to highlight the important tests that really show where these two systems perform the most differently:

PCMark Memories 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
CPU Image Manipulation 3.78 MB/s 3.319 MB/s
HDD Importing pictures to Windows Photo Gallery 26.533 MB/s 31.38 MB/s

 

The PCMark Memories 1 test is actually a multitasking test with two things happening at once; some basic image manipulation is being performed alongside importing pictures into the Windows Photo Gallery. Both of these tasks are multithreaded and thus there's an actual advantage to having more than two cores, which is why despite the clock speed deficit Dell's XPS One 24 is able to pull ahead.

PCMark Memories 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Video Transcoding VC-1 to WMV9 2.681 MB/s 3.075 MB/s

 

The Memories 2 test is a simple video transcoding test going from VC-1 to WMV9, and here we see the quad-core advantage once more. The TV and Movies 1 suite also performs a video transcoding operation but this time while playing back a HD-DVD, while both systems are able to play the video back at full frame rate the transcoding task completes faster on the quad-core Dell system.

PCMark TV and Movies 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Video Transcoding (VC1 to VC1) 0.435 MB/s 0.664 MB/s
Video Playback VC1 HD-DVD with SD commentary 29.46 fps 29.44 fps

 

The TV and Movies 2 test is similar to the one I just mentioned, here we're playing a slightly more stressful HD-DVD source but hitting the disk in an access pattern similar to what would be used in Windows Media Center. Once again both systems pull off the video playback just fine, but the Dell machine is twice as fast when it comes to the disk portion of the test thanks to its extra cores.

PCMark TV and Movies 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
HDD Windows Media Center 25.007 MB/s 44.642 MB/s
Video Playback VC1 HD-DVD with SD commentary 29.431 fps 29.432 fps

 

The Gaming suites clearly go to the iMac; most games don't use more than two threads and Apple's dual cores are clocked much higher than Dell's four, not to mention that the iMac has a much faster GPU as well. If you want to game, the iMac is the way to go (that still feels weird to type).

PCMark Gaming 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Data Decompression 764.975 MB/s 796.299 MB/s
GPU Gaming 22.4 fps 9.8 fps

 

PCMark Gaming 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
CPU Gaming 8726.193 ops/s 7518.558 ops/s
HDD 10.692 MB/s 11.054 MB/s

 

The Music 1 test is a light multitasking test, here we're viewing web pages, transcoding a MP3 to WMA format and adding music to a Windows Media Player library. The web task is faster on the iMac, while the other two tasks are slightly faster on the Dell. I'd call this one a wash, the two perform about the same.

PCMark Music 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Web Page Rendering - Music Shop 14 pages/s 12.167 pages/s
Audio Transcoding (MP3 to WMA) 0.578 MB/s 0.633 MB/s
HDD Adding Music to WMP 4.953 MB/s 5.06 MB/s

 

The second test is simply transcoding a WAV file to WMA lossless, basically backing up a CD. I haven't seen audio transcoding optimized for more than two threads, so it makes sense that Apple takes the advantage here - the iMac is around 27% faster than the Dell XPS One 24.

PCMark Music 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Audio Transcoding WAV to WMA Lossless 8.884 MB/s 6.971 MB/s

 

The PCMark Communications 1 suite runs three tasks, here we're encrypted data, compressing data and running rules on a Windows Mail inbox. Despite the multitasking nature of the workload, it's simply not heavily threaded enough to stress all four of Dell's cores, Apple takes the clear win here.

PCMark Communications 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Data Encryption (CNG AES CBC) 4.211 MB/s 3.655 MB/s
Data Compression 4.797 MB/s 3.085 MB/s
Windows Mail - Copying 9.807 ops/s 4.605 ops/s

 

The same goes for the 2nd communications suite, it's a 3 task scenario but the iMac pulls ahead in each of the three tasks.

PCMark Communications 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Web Page Rendering - News Serial 2.229 pages/s 1.776 pages/s
Data Decryption (CNG AES CBC) 112.91 MB/s 92.977 MB/s
HDD Windows Defender 11.183 MB/s 10.665 MB/s

 

The last two Productivity suites echo what we've seen thus far, take out video encoding/decoding and the quad-core choice just doesn't make sense; a faster dual core wins.

PCMark Productivity 1 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Text Editing 861.106 KB/s 597.045 KB/s

 

PCMark Productivity 2 Apple iMac 24" (Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz) Dell XPS One 24 (Core 2 Quad 2.33GHz)
Windows Contacts - Searching 17865 contacts/s 12778 contacts/s
Windows Mail Searching 8.444 ops/s 4.901 ops/s
Web Page Rendering - Favorites Group - Parallel 1.424 pages/s 1.508 pages/s
HDD Application Loading 2.61 MB/s 2.551 MB/s

 

What's interesting here is that there is no clear victory, while I'd venture a guess that the vast majority of users would benefit from the 3.06GHz Core 2 Duo in the iMac, it really depends on your usage model. If you are doing a lot of video editing, video encoding/transcoding and image manipulation - basically if you're using this thing as more of a workstation, then you're better off with the Core 2 Quad Q8200 in the Dell. If you're doing lighter multitasking, general usage stuff or basically anything other than 3D rendering/video manipulation, you'll find the iMac faster - even under Windows. Strange.

Input Device Wars Can You Game on It?
Comments Locked

60 Comments

View All Comments

  • strikeback03 - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    I saw a post saying it is replaceable, it just requires disassembling the entire computer FROM THE FRONT.
  • Griswold - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    My vista box takes ~8s to get from suspend to RAM back to login when keyboard and mouse works again. Must be the jobs distortion field delaying things around your desk. :p

    Oh and one more thing, the "dock" was not invented by apple. No need for a patronizing tone towards Dell for making their own dock for vista.
  • Zebo - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    Really things like 750 GB and quad core mean nothing top this crowd. Why not talk about the quality of screens? Apples uses an expensive IPS technology while Dell uses a VA and suffers from it's color shifting. How about input lag while gaming? How about noise?

  • sxr7171 - Tuesday, November 4, 2008 - link

    I think its unfortunate how sometimes people will compare specs of laptops as if they were a desktop of some sort. Every form factor has a purpose and a market and that has to be considered. Every buyer has a different needs. Personally I couldn't care less how much hard drive space this thing has. If I ever bought one, it would sit in a kitchen or some little alcove. I have a home server that has all my data and it gets shared amongst all my machines. Nobody with 3 or more computers should live without NAS or a home server. Then you can have nice 64GB SSDs in each machine and have them be responsive.


    I'm very disappointed that neither has an HDMI input or something for an auxiliary digital source. Some people might want to hook up a cable box to it.

    Also I wish the Dell's speakers were optional or removable. They look ugly on an otherwise beautiful machine.
  • strikeback03 - Tuesday, November 4, 2008 - link

    Rather large for a kitchen. I'd rather a smaller touchscreen and have the system in a miniITX or smaller case, or just build it into the screen yourself. One of the grad students I work with is doing that - built a custom case with a 19" LCD at the front and the motherboard of a Eee 4G behind.
  • Zebo - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    top = to
  • Pirks - Thursday, October 30, 2008 - link

    What an irony
  • Griswold - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    Hard to believe your brainsize exceeds that of a peanut. Its been spelled out for you: the GPU does the trick, numbuts.
  • JarredWalton - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    I think the point is that it's surprising that Apple is the company using the higher spec GPU. What's in the MacBook Pro? Yeah, a 9600M GT. What's in the Mac Pro desktop these days? Top-end choice is an 8800 GT, with the default being an HD 2600 XT. So yes, it's surprising that their new iMac has a GPU that's actually not pathetic for gaming, whereas Dell's XPS One 24 is exactly that.
  • Pirks - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    Who are you talking to? Braindead PC/Windoze worshipping zombie named Griswold? What a waste of time :)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now