By increasing the clock rate, the microprocessor's speed can be increased but with a cost of more heat generation, which may sometimes rupture the processor.
Laptops do not have a specific clock speed. The clock speed of the specific processor that is in the laptop determines the clock rate of the computer. For example, my computer runs at a clock speed of 2 GHz. Some computers even have clock speeds close to 4 GHz.
This doesn't really math out properly. A 1.9GHz processor is a 1.9GHz processor. It can be the EQUIVILENT of a higher clock-rate, lower instructions per cycle processor, but it isn't the same, or "equal" at different clock speeds.
Anything over a gigabyte would be ideal for that processor speed.
Clock speed is measured in the unit of hertz. The higher amount of hertz the faster the system will perform. The clock speed is the rate at which the processor recognizes inputs, therefore faster clock speed leads to faster performance.
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.
To increase the clock speed of your CPU, you need to either look into overclocking (which is dangerous) or buying a new processor (which will cost anywhere from $40 to over $1000).
Dynamic frequency scaling
Th clock speed is the processor speed. It is simply the amout of operations the processor can do per second. However if the processor has multiple cores, it will be as fast as number of cores * clock speed. Note that the processor speed is not the overall computer speed.
The only way to increase the processor speed is by overclocking. Through overclocking, you can increase the overall speed of the processor.
The optimal fan speed depends on the size of the heatsink and the clock rate of your processor. As such, there is no single answer.
The "gigahertz" reading of your laptop basically denotes the processor speed. It's the number of cycles occurring in your processor, each second. So, you have to change your processor to change your gigahertz. Some new processors have over-clocking features to increase (over-clock) your processor speed to a higher value (higher than it was designed to operate optimally). You might have to go for better cooling solutions for your processor, in case you plan to over-clock.
Yes