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Nicolas Alvarez wrote:
> Some people said the world doesn't have enough currency to buy the needed
> bad code offsets to compensate for the world's bad code.
Have you *seen* our project management system?!?
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Tim Cook wrote:
> Is there actually a tangible difference in a person's electric bill (due
> to less energy actually being consumed) when they run a low-CPU program
> over the course of two hours vs. running a CPU-intensive program over
> the course of two hours?
Yes. But don't tell my mom, or she will make me stop my 24/7 100% CPU usage
(she pays the electricity bill).
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>> Is there actually a tangible difference in a person's electric bill (due
>> to less energy actually being consumed) when they run a low-CPU program
>> over the course of two hours vs. running a CPU-intensive program over
>> the course of two hours?
>
> Yes. But don't tell my mom, or she will make me stop my 24/7 100% CPU usage
> (she pays the electricity bill).
Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So, about
the same as two light bulbs.
The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of power. o_O
(I also noted little or no difference in power usage between an idle PC
doing nothing and the same PC with the CPU and GPU both maxed out.
Although I have a bigger GPU now...)
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Invisible schrieb:
> Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So, about
> the same as two light bulbs.
>
> The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of power. o_O
... which you have powered on for how long each day?
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>> Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So,
>> about the same as two light bulbs.
>>
>> The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of
>> power. o_O
>
> ... which you have powered on for how long each day?
The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
The kettle probably takes approximately 1 minute to boil, and with the
amount of tea my mum drinks, the kettle probably burns through multiple
kWh per day - my PC would have to be on 24/7 for a week or two to
compete with that.
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> The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
> minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
Bah it's winter, both heat up your house thus saving on heating so I
wouldn't worry :-)
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>> The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
>> minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
>
> Bah it's winter, both heat up your house thus saving on heating so I
> wouldn't worry :-)
Absolutely! Altough my PC heats the building more efficiently than the
kettle, for at least the following reasons:
- The water's phase change from liquid to vapour uses a large amount of
energy for a small change in temperature.
- The kettle is extensively insulated to facilitate rapid heating of the
water. My PC, on the other hand, has special fan systems especially
designed to *dissapate* heat. ;-)
I have noticed that within 30 minutes of turning my PC on, my bedroom
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>>> Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So,
>>> about the same as two light bulbs.
>>>
>>> The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of
>>> power. o_O
>>
>> ... which you have powered on for how long each day?
>
> The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
> minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
YOU FAIL BASIC MATH! >_<
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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On 20-11-2009 20:03, Orchid XP v8 wrote:
>>>> Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So,
>>>> about the same as two light bulbs.
>>>>
>>>> The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of
>>>> power. o_O
>>>
>>> ... which you have powered on for how long each day?
>>
>> The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
>> minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
>
> YOU FAIL BASIC MATH! >_<
>
Or you are using a pocket calculator.
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Invisible schrieb:
>>> Last time I clocked it, having my PC running uses about 200W. So,
>>> about the same as two light bulbs.
>>>
>>> The kettle, on the other hand, uses OVER THREE THOUSAND WATTS of
>>> power. o_O
>>
>> ... which you have powered on for how long each day?
>
> The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than my computer uses in 1,000
> minutes ( = nearly 17 hours).
Math fail?
PC = 200 W
kettle = 3,000 W (ca.)
kettle : PC = 3,000 : 200 = 15
2 00 ==
-----
1 000
1 000
A: "The kettle uses more power in 1 minute than [your] computer uses in
15 minutes ( = nearly 0.25 hours)."
> The kettle probably takes approximately 1 minute to boil, and with the
> amount of tea my mum drinks, the kettle probably burns through multiple
> kWh per day - my PC would have to be on 24/7 for a week or two to
> compete with that.
If the kettle takes approximately 1 minute to boil, to compete with 24/7
PC use your mum would have to consume four jugs(!) of tea per hour. I
would consider that pretty unlikely...
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