Which CPU processor should I get for my New Laptop ?

If you are looking for the best CPU processor for your brand new laptop, then read on. Your choice would most likely depend on your knowledge of CPU types. Here's how to decide.

Most of the Intel CPU names end in a capital letter or two. This letter gives us a lot of information regarding their identities. Any CPU CORE chip ending with an "H" is a maximum-power mobile chip with up to 16 processing threads that your software can tap via a feature known as Hyper-Threading. Ofcourse not all CPUs support Hyper-Threading, but if the programs you run are fully multi-threaded (that is, able to take advantage of all available computing threads when performing demanding tasks), this will be a big advantage.

You would most likely see the H-series chips only in weighty business machines meant for heavy calculation work or data analysis. You might  also see the H-series in the better grade of gaming laptops, and in some mobile workstations. Some of the current high-end workstation laptops make use of Intel's Xeon processors, which are at heart server chips specially designed for the demands of accelerating specialized advanced-calculation and content-creation programs, as well as for running all-out for extended periods of time. But a Core i7 H-series is more common, and definitely the sign of a legitimately high-end configuration. (See our guide to the best mobile workstations.)

Other CPUs has identification that end in "U," on the other hand. This means that it is an ultramobile processor. These U-series chips are lower-power chips designed to work in slimmer, lighter laptops that have limited thermal headroom. Now, depending on what you do with your laptop, these can be perfectly fine CPUs. You'll be able to do everyday business or office tasks on a U-series Core i5 or Core i7 with no complaints, and on the best of them, demanding content-creation tasks will be possible without painful delays.

But just realize that the H-series is where the real muscle power is in laptop land. So it really depends on what purpose you would use your brand new laptop or in other cases macbook.

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