I do not think you will see any difference at all. .
Yes you can,but you can't gain the performance what 3.5 GHz give you.....but if u have enough cache,ram and well graphics card,you can get better performance with your processor Yes you can,but you can't gain the performance what 3.5 GHz give you.....but if u have enough cache,ram and well graphics card,you can get better performance with your processor
Nothing
Minecraft should run decently on there, but it really depends on how much RAM you have and your graphics card. If you have 2GB + of RAM it should be OK and a decent graphics card would be ideal. The processor should be fine.
Update your graphics card and processor. Adding RAM also helps. It may be easier to buy a new computer with a high-end graphics card and processor. There are many that are prebuilt (like Alienware) but the cheaper option would be to individually order all the parts (motherboard, processor, graphics card, RAM, etc.) and put it together by yourself.
Different pastes keep your processor cooler then others. In a way, yes it does effect the processor because the better paste you have the cooler your system will run which then will allow your computer to run at maximum speed.
Of course, every computer/laptop has a graphics card, even if it's integrated. If you want to play GTA 4 you will definitely need a fairly decent PC/Laptop to actually run it, if your laptop is outdated and has an integrated graphics card and processor, chances are you're not going to have much luck. As for Windows 7, it's only an operating system, Windows 7 64 bit is much better visualized, and will help games run better, but without a decent Graphics card or Processor you won't be going anywhere.
Yes.
Javascript is great for handling and manipulating data structures, but it doesn't have any capability to handle graphics - that is where HTML comes in. HTML is a graphics language. So, in general, Javascript that is embedded in HTML handles all the math and data handling for the webpage and uses HTML as a user interface.
if you do not know what graphics card is in your pc, you most likely have onboard graphics- i.e graphics which are rendered by your motherboard or processor. however, if you are not sure what grahics card you have, you can run the directx diagnostic tool, whic will tell you just about all the specs of your pc. this is run by going start menu > run> then type in 'dxdiag' without the quotes. the relevant information will be found under the 'display' tab.
the program will run on a regular computer, nothing special is needed. I run it on a 1gb ram, 2.3ghz processor, with intel(r) family graphics, lol. And it's fine.
Im not sure what you want to use it for so here is a run down of things you could possibly use it for: Gaming- at least 4gb of memory, the more, the better 200gb hard drive a good fast processor, the faster the better but at least a core 2 duo a good graphics card, again nicer the better. get as nice as you can depending on your budget a 64-bit Operating system (important for memory usage) Work/Business- 2-3gb of memory 200gb hard drive processor not as important graphics card not as important, integrated chipset graphics is fine 32-bit OS is fine Entertainment- 3-4gb of memory 300gb hard drive core 2 duo processor nice graphics card (no integrated chipset!) 64-bit OS
Im not sure what you want to use it for so here is a run down of things you could possibly use it for: Gaming- at least 4gb of memory, the more, the better 200gb hard drive a good fast processor, the faster the better but at least a core 2 duo a good graphics card, again nicer the better. get as nice as you can depending on your budget a 64-bit Operating system (important for memory usage) Work/Business- 2-3gb of memory 200gb hard drive processor not as important graphics card not as important, integrated chipset graphics is fine 32-bit OS is fine Entertainment- 3-4gb of memory 300gb hard drive core 2 duo processor nice graphics card (no integrated chipset!) 64-bit OS Hope this helps ;)