It depends on the CPU, the older ones with a lower amount of cores tend to not work so well on sony vegas. The phenom ii's and the new amd's and intel's tend to do the job, but more cores is better for video editing.
The sony 3000
The PlayStation 3 has a CPU known as a "Cell." It is based upon the PowerPC architecture, and was designed by IBM, Toshiba, and Sony.
Your Sony Vegas may be lagging due to several factors, including insufficient system resources, such as RAM or CPU power, particularly if you're working with high-resolution footage or complex projects. Additionally, having too many background applications running or using outdated graphics drivers can contribute to performance issues. To improve performance, consider optimizing your project settings, using proxy files for editing, or upgrading your hardware if necessary.
That CPU is sufficient for Fallout: New Vegas. Generally any decent multi-core processor will suffice. What is of importance however is the amount of memory or graphics card your machine has.
Intel, Amd, Apple (they now use intel) sun microsystems, i dont know of a fifth but id guess at sony.
You cannot, the CPU automatically runs when it needs to be cooled down or is processing large data. You can however buy another fan, install it to your computer, and make it run whenever the computer is on.
CPU might be overheating. try clelaning the dust away or upgrading the heat-symc and fan.
if you are using a old computer to play DVD movies or just videos on the computer.......it will start to freeze up and can be very difficult.........you need to have a CPU that can encode faster then your current CPU...................if you need any thing els just add me to msn or a I.M ...................p.tnetworx@hotmail.com.
go to itunes and download it. if you have an acount all of your music/movies will be saved if you don't but you have a iPod you can simply plug it into your CPU of the new CPU and right click the music library there should be a slote that reads download music from iPod to itunes CPU: (computer)
The Q6600 processor is more than adequate for 1080p Blu-Ray movies. Users report that playing these movies only uses about 15-20% of CPU time.
The CPU is soldered onto the motherboard, although if you were careful, you could remove it using a solder braid or heat gun. Doing so would serve little purpose, though. It's a custom-made chip from 14 years ago; it is both computationally weak and incompatible with pretty much any other device you might encounter (the processor in the Sony PSP is similar, but about 10 times faster).
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