No. It represents the clock speed of the processor. The clock speed is usually misinterpreted by many as the power of the processor, but the physical design of the processor has far more to do with the processors throughput than the clock speed itself.
Yes
A 4 GHz processor is generally faster than a 2.3 GHz processor, regardless of the number of cores. The clock speed (measured in GHz) indicates how many cycles per second the processor can perform, so a higher GHz value typically means better performance in single-threaded tasks. However, a quad-core 2.3 GHz processor may perform better in multi-threaded applications compared to a single-core 4 GHz processor, depending on the workload and how well it utilizes multiple cores.
yes it will do even better because a quad processor that is 2.33 ghz means that it has 4 processors and that each one is 2.33 ghz... therefore by doing 4 x 2.33 you get a resulting answer of 9.32 ghz. So yes the quad core processor will run the game and in fact it will run it very well... by the way i have a 2.5 ghz quad core processor. yes it will do even better because a quad processor that is 2.33 ghz means that it has 4 processors and that each one is 2.33 ghz... therefore by doing 4 x 2.33 you get a resulting answer of 9.32 ghz. So yes the quad core processor will run the game and in fact it will run it very well... by the way i have a 2.5 ghz quad core processor.
I do all the time with only a 1.30 GHz processor so you should be able to
yes the minimum spec is a GHz processor you should be fine.
GHz refers to how many instructions - or cycles - a processor can process per second.For example, if you has a 2.4 GHz processor, it could do 2,400,000,000 processes per second.
IBM
3.2 ghz
Of course it is, it is much more faster than the 1.5 GHz processor.
GHz is your processor speed. GB has nothing to do with your GHz, it's just a size of space.
It's impossible to answer that question. All else being equal, higher is better. However, a six-core 2.8 GHz processor will blow a single-core 3.0 GHz processor out of the water for some applications.
No, minimum requirement is a 2.2 GHz processor.