Thanks... was actually just doing some research on overclocking om another forum
from what I have been reading there, it seems as if the general consensus is that the risk really outweighs the reward. Do you have the same thoughts on that as well?
Is there any links on this site that teaches about the values and limits of your processor? I'd really like to learn more about this...
I used to over clock my home PC. At this point the extra MHz gained is not noticeable. The real deal is in the multi core processors and your memory. There are so many other variables that affect the speed of a computer. This is what this phone is a computer.
With that being said even at the 1GHz value of this processor I don't see over clocking being worth it for the value gained. I doubt you would see much if any of a performance improvement. You would be better off know how to maintain your phone than over clock it.
Examples:
Get rid of applications you don't need / use
Do not use high resolution complicated backgrounds. Stick with simple small sized wallpaper
If you have multiple home launchers installed make sure that you don't have any widgets set on the home launcher you are not using
Don't install / use a auto task killer
reboot your phone daily or at least weekly
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I don't think or at least I have not seen any specific threads that go into the processor and its limitations. Again the processor is not the only thing that determines performance. Memory has a lot to do with it and there are different types of memory. I am not sure how this phone utilizes memory or what different memory is or is not used.
For example however of a PC. When you make a request the PC looks at the L1 Cache (memory) right on the CPU and if what it needs is there it grabs it and it is very fast. Very small amount of memory there also.
If it is not found then it goes to the L2 cache on the motherboard. This is a bit larger but also is not directly on the CPU so the data travels a bit slower. It depends on your motherboard and how much bandwidth there is between the CPU and the L2 Memory.
If what is needed is not found in the L2 Cache then it goes to your system memory RAM.
If it is not found there it goes to your hard drive. This takes the longest as the hard drive is mechanical and much slower than accessing data from memory. Unless you get the new SSD drives that are not mechanical and run via memory chips instead of platters and heads.
So here the memory, hard drive, motherboard, and CPU all have a large factor in how "fast" a PC is. This phone is a PC and the processor alone is not going to be the determining factor of its speed. Wish I knew more about this phones hardware to explain how it works but I don't build phones.
